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...though. The S.M.A.P. can also remember when the first ball-point pens came on the market for $12.50. No longer, said the ads, could ink leak from your fountain pen and ruin your new shirt. The S.M.A.P. had in those days a rich friend who spent $52 on the Fritz Busch performance of The Marriage of Figaro (on 17 breakable records); that version, one of half a dozen, now costs $18. When the S.M.A.P. first went to Europe in 1946, the only way he could find to get there was a Turkish freighter that took 28 days from New York...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: Nothing Is What It Used to Be | 8/16/1982 | See Source »

...American Shakespeare Theatre is now presenting Hamlet for the fourth time in its history. In 1958 Fritz Weaver gasped and wheezed his way through an only moderately cut text, with a running-time of three hours and a quarter. In 1964 Tom Sawyer made an admirable stab at the role in a version with a playing time of two hours and three quarters...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: A 'Hamlet' Without the Prince | 8/10/1982 | See Source »

...Degas' Dancers Practicing at the Bar and Seurat's Bathing to canvases by American painters Winslow Homer (Crab Fishing off Yarmouth) and John Sloan (Picnic Grounds). There are also reproductions of a medieval tapestry, History of Venus, and several sculptures, notably St. George and the Dragon by Fritz Preiss and Fulda's 11th century antependium for Basel Cathedral. An audience favorite is Norman Rockwell, who has four Saturday Evening Post covers this year. As always, the pageant winds up with Da Vinci's Last Supper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: In Laguna Beach, a Living Louvre | 7/26/1982 | See Source »

...worldwide financial crunch. Scores of nations deeply in debt are finding it difficult to meet their payments. Private banks have cut off credit to whole areas of Eastern Europe, Latin America and Africa. Some bankers and economists fear a prolonged contraction of credit that could disrupt world trade. Says Fritz Leutwiler, chairman of the Bank for International Settlements: "When all the banks get worried at once, there may be a squeeze. The [international financial] markets are extremely vulnerable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What in the World Is Wrong? | 7/19/1982 | See Source »

...that Kennedy and Mondale remain the front runners for the party's presidential nomination in 1984. Although Kennedy outshone his rival by several watts, Mondale drew raves by delivering a much better speech than was expected. The four other candidates who spoke-Senators Hart, John Glenn of Ohio, Fritz Rollings of South Carolina and Alan Cranston of California-turned in respectable performances but failed to fire up the crowd. Glenn looked on the bright side: "I didn't see anyone asleep." The fifth hopeful, former Governor Reubin Askew of Florida, chose not to make an address, pursuing instead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Basking in Reagan's Troubles | 7/12/1982 | See Source »

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