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...state rooms contain only a tiny fraction of the immense Royal Collection (10,000 pictures, they say, with 30,000 drawings and half a million prints), better sampled in the galleries outside the palace that are always open to the public and have no queues. Buckingham Palace does contain some great pictures though. Most are from the Netherlands: Rembrandt's ship $ builder, with his sketches of hull sections before him, being handed a note by his stout wife; top-flight Rubenses; and Van Dyck's two portraits of Charles I, especially the "greate peece," which depicts him with his consort...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Buckingham Palace: 18 Rms, No Royal Vu | 8/30/1993 | See Source »

...rights, the reorienting of culture around individuals. We obviously value that. But like all human gains, it has been purchased at a price. Most people faced with greater freedom from family, law, village, clan, have used it for good purposes -- artistic expression, economic entrepreneurship, self-expression -- but a small fraction of people have used it for bad purposes. So just as we have had an artistic and economic explosion, we have had a crime explosion. I think the two are indissolubly entwined. When that prosperity puts cars, drugs and guns into the hands of even relatively poor 18-year-olds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Crime: A Rhythm to the Madness | 8/23/1993 | See Source »

...routine one. But the fear of it is growing exponentially and in the process changing the way America drives. The FBI estimates that there were 25,000 carjackings last year, up an alarming 25% from the year before. That is still only a tiny fraction of the 1.6 million annual car thefts, but when combined with other incidents in which cars have become both weapons and targets -- the drive-by shootings in Washington or the cinder blocks dropped off highway overpasses in Detroit -- it leaves an impression of rolling danger that fuels a kind of hysteria. "Our agents say there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hell on Wheels | 8/16/1993 | See Source »

...Harvard endowment could and should become a primary case study for Business School students. Extensive human resources could be devoted to analyzing the past and future of the markets at a fraction of the cost of Meyer's salary. Actual management decisions would be only be made by the committee...

Author: By Hugh G. Eakin, | Title: The Count Goes Full On the HMC | 7/20/1993 | See Source »

...Justice Department position, as argued at the trial by attorney David Seidman, is that MIT's tuition, or whatever fraction can be afforded by a certain student, constitutes a price for education and therefore must conform to antitrust standards...

Author: By Marion B. Gammill, | Title: MIT Presents Overlap Appeal | 6/25/1993 | See Source »

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