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...presidency has taken on a color that in the past was found only in places such as bars and brothels. The deep wrinkles of a drunkard's face, the foul language of a brawny bartender, the sad eyes of a wasted whore are replaced by the president's level gaze, by the only glimmer from the chandeliers in the inaugural hall, by Martin Lefkowitz as the munches on a chicken wing in a park outside the White House, muttering, "Yep, Ford's gonna be all right...

Author: By Michael Massing, | Title: Honeymooning With the Bathrobed Man | 8/16/1974 | See Source »

...through traffic more easily than he picks his way through reporters' questions. To show off his new skills, Ron even gave a demonstration to a posse of reporters on a back road, only to run out of gas and | wheeze to a halt under the unblinking gaze of a herd of Herefords. Said one wry observer: "After Evel Knievel has jumped the Grand Canyon, Ron is going to top his act-he's going to try to jump the credibility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jul. 29, 1974 | 7/29/1974 | See Source »

President Nixon, meet the Rev. Daniel L. Pierotti of Georgetown Lutheran Church. He, too, knows what it is to fall under the critical gaze of CBS Correspondent Dan Rather, 42, who attends Pierotti's church when he is in Washington. Says Pierotti gamely, "He honestly tells me what he thinks about the sermon." Pierotti turned the other cheek recently and asked Rather to address the biennial convention of the Lutheran Church in America. Before an audience of 1,000 at Baltimore's Civic Center, Rather shed his hard-hitting image to offer a credo that required no instant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jul. 22, 1974 | 7/22/1974 | See Source »

...worldwide epidemic of brain inflammation, caused by a virus and named encephalitis lethargica because the most severely stricken victims spent days or weeks almost comatose and immobile. Some of these patients soon developed full-blown cases of Parkinsonism, marked by alternations of involuntary movements and rigidity, a fixed gaze and a shuffling gait. Even after this encephalitis virus disappeared in 1931, the incidence of Parkinsonism continued to rise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Parkinson's Puzzle | 7/22/1974 | See Source »

...this enveloping character of metamorphic fantasy that Miró responded. A painting like Landscape (The Hare) is its reduction: the horizon line drawn clean as a wire, yet with an irrational undular flourish; the absurd and soulful hare, like a creature from a comic strip. Its gaze is fixed on what appears to be a rifle ball, ricocheting in a spiral from the gun of a disembodied hunter. The color, too, is unique - the broad planes of earth and sky like a flag, interspersed by echoing flecks of red, or ange and yellow on the body of the hare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Joan Mir | 7/1/1974 | See Source »

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