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Ladies and gentlemen, this is your tour guide speaking, welcoming you once again to the New England literary express. We ve already visited the houses of Hawthorne, Melville and Robert Frost. Next, a live one. Our bus is 25 miles north of Boston and nearing the seaside home of John Updike. Get your cameras ready. You will find the author's barony photogenic, and the author, if we should spot him, has weathered well himself. It might interest you to know that our subject and his second wife Martha moved here in the spring of 1982, a particularly productive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Perennial Promises Kept | 10/18/1982 | See Source »

DIVORCED. David Frost, 43, peripatetic, sometimes abrasive British TV interviewer-producer; and Lynne Frederick, 28, actress and widow of Peter Sellers, who married her old flame. Frost, six months after the actor's death; after 17 months of marriage, no children; in Switzerland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Jul. 5, 1982 | 7/5/1982 | See Source »

...democracy depends upon correcting it whenever the powerful slip into that delusion. Napoleon once wrote: "They charge me with the commission of great crimes. Men of my stamp do not commit crimes." Richard Nixon evidently had some such Napoleonic conception of his exemptions. In his interview with David Frost in 1977, Nixon stated his basic mistake: "Well, when the President does it, that means it is not illegal." If it had no other purpose or consequence, the agony of Watergate would have accomplished something if it succeeded in teaching Richard Nixon a fundamental American civics lesson. On the evidence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Watergate's Clearest Lesson | 6/14/1982 | See Source »

...early winter now. The daytime temperature hovers in the 30s, and at night the frost shades the windows of the few white wooden houses. When the wind doesn't roar, it howls in the rolling hills. Seagulls loop and cry above the harbor. If this were a normal season, there would be the slight scent of peat in the air, and the residents of the settlement would be going about the business of putting the rams out to the ewes. There are late potatoes and winter cabbage in the family vegetable gardens. The sheep dogs would either be working...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sheltered No Longer | 6/7/1982 | See Source »

Warning signs sprout on trees along the unpaved roads. FROST HEAVES . . . BUMPS . . . CLOSED. Only the foolish travel back roads without chains, winches and, for real safety, four-wheel drive. Brookfield has 76 miles of town road, and only four miles are paved. Citizens who are dissatisfied with the correlation between taxes paid and quality of road surface tend to complain. As a consequence, many road commissioners and some selectmen in Vermont tend to acquire unlisted telephone numbers after about a year of public service...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Vermont: Mind over Mud | 5/10/1982 | See Source »

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