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...those involved in the story agreed that joblessness is a devastating psychological experience. Staff Writer Jim Kelly wrote the cover story, with the assistance of Reporter-Researchers Betty Satterwhite and Brigid O'Hara-Forster. Kelly, who lost a night desk clerk's job in a New Jersey hotel while he was in college, says: "It was only a part-time job and by no means the most important thing in my life, but I did wonder, 'What did I do wrong?' " Washington Correspondent Gisela Bolte remembers the struggle to land her first job in post-World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Feb. 8, 1982 | 2/8/1982 | See Source »

...love is fundamentally solitary, and has as core a profound impersonality. The concept of transference at once destroys faith in personal relations and explains why they are tragic--we cannot knew each other... A horrible kind of predestination hovers over each new attachment we form. 'Only connect,' E. M. Forster proposed. 'Only we can't,' the psychoanalyst knows...

Author: By Daniel S. Benjamin, | Title: The Father of Us All | 11/4/1981 | See Source »

...story was researched by Eileen Chiu and Brigid O'Hara-Forster and written by Senior Writer Lance Morrow, who wrote a much acclaimed Essay on Viet Nam veterans (TIME, June 1). Says Morrow: "Viet Nam was a shattering blow to this country. Americans are slowly beginning to face that complicated era and are giving Viet Nam veterans the help, acknowledgment and respect that they deserve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Jul. 13, 1981 | 7/13/1981 | See Source »

...crusade. For 18 years the elegantly impoverished daughter of Renishaw lived in unfashionable Bayswater. Her literary teas Evelyn Waugh summed up tersely as "stale buns and no chairs." Yet what names eagerly scrambled up the dingy stairs to knock on her "nasty green door." T.S. Eliot, Ravel, Diaghilev, E.M. Forster, Virginia Woolf, William Butler Yeats were among the Olympians one might have met at the Sitwells' salons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Her Own Most Inspired Poem | 6/15/1981 | See Source »

...walk toward The Thing because that's their job. Alligator provides a terse manual on the care, feeding and ultimate annihilation of 2,000-lb., 36-ft.-long reptiles-and on the art of making a grind-house movie with care and wit. Good Cop David Madison (Robert Forster, in an authoritatively low-key performance) is forever being reminded of his thinning hair; and, when he learns that the alligator has grown to monster proportions by ingesting hormones, Madison grunts hopefully, "Maybe he'll die of cancer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Saylesmanship | 4/20/1981 | See Source »

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