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Even as a child, Bork delighted in running counter to the grain. He became a popular but bookish teenager who mystified his friends in the solidly Republican town of Ben Avon, a Pittsburgh suburb, by declaring himself a socialist. His father, a purchasing agent for a steel company, and his mother, a teacher, both thought the flirtation with socialism was crazy. "I read The Coming Struggle for Power, a Marxist analysis of capitalism by John Strachey," he recalled later. "It was powerful stuff and I thought it was probably true...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Long and Winding Odyssey | 9/21/1987 | See Source »

...default came after nine months of talks in London finally fizzled. North Korea has owed most of the money, which it used mainly to buy grain and heavy equipment and to build bridges and roads, since the early 1970s. The country has never repaid any principal; indeed, on several occasions, it also suspended debt repayments, only to work out more favorable terms with Japanese and Western creditors. But for the past three years, Pyongyang has refused even to meet interest charges. For a time it looked as if the banks and the North Koreans might work out another agreement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pulling The Plug: North Korea goes into default | 9/7/1987 | See Source »

...year's levels. The yield in the agriculturally important states of Haryana and Uttar Pradesh will be about 70% below normal. A famine is considered unlikely since India has large stockpiles of wheat and rice. But food shortages are a real possibility, and India may be forced to import grain for the first time in years. That could create new political problems for Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi, whose ruling party has taken credit for India's recent self-sufficiency in food grains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: When the Rain God Failed | 8/31/1987 | See Source »

...time when so much art is ironic, distanced and parasitically given to quoting the Big Media, Murray's work goes against the grain. It presents a standoff between fracture and extreme sensuousness. It is nominally abstract, a bit hard to read at first -- until you are used to the shaping and layering of canvas planes in the paintings and of separate sheets of paper in the drawings -- but almost profligate in its flat-out appeal to the eye. The chrome yellows and leaf greens, cobalts, pinks, purples and deep, reverberant blacks that proliferate in her work are the signs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Abstraction And Popeye's Biceps | 7/13/1987 | See Source »

...royal family has never lacked for ink in the British press, especially ! in the flashier tabloids whose rival scoops are sometimes mountains built from one grain of fact. Diana, in particular, attracts headlines: over the course of her six-year marriage to Prince Charles, she has been reported pregnant countless times, has spent a king's ransom on clothes and was anorexic. Lately, however, British papers have been feasting on an unusually large banquet of negative stories about the younger royals, including once unthinkable innuendos about (gasp!) Diana's marital fidelity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: When In Doubt, Run the Royals | 7/13/1987 | See Source »

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