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...loving humor, Mistry develops a portrait of a household: Gustad savoring mock-Tennyson verses at the dinner table, telling his friends of his son's college prospects, singing The Donkey Serenade to his ailing daughter. The details of his life are wonderfully exact: a bottle of Camel Royal Blue Ink, old copies of Bertrand Russell, an 1897 edition of Barrere and Leland's Dictionary of Slang, Jargon and Cant. And Mistry catches the pungent cadences of Indian English as they have seldom been caught before: "What everything have you told them? Always I shout and scream, while nice Daddy watches...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Close Quarters: SUCH A LONG JOURNEY by Rohinton Mistry | 4/8/1991 | See Source »

...ink has been spilled in the past few months over the question of the draft. Now that the war is over, all the pundits and prognosticators will probably return to the savings and loans crisis or the drug problem or the refusal of the pandas in the National Zoo to mate...

Author: By Eric R. Columbus, | Title: Dump the Draft Forever | 3/16/1991 | See Source »

...scandal's most immediate repercussions affect First American, which had trouble enough already. Staggered by the avalanche of distressed real estate loans that has flattened banks across the country, First American lost $182.5 million in 1990, its first red ink ever. The deficit last week led to the resignation of C. Jackson Ritchie, the company's chief executive, and the layoff of nearly 100 of the bank's 6,000 employees. Regulators were worried that First American's secret parent, itself in financial trouble, would start siphoning off funds that would deepen the loss and conceivably fatten the bill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Capital Scandal | 3/4/1991 | See Source »

...poem, written carefully in black ink, received the typical slew of responses. "Nice poem, but the calligraphy is a turn-off. Buy a Mac like everybody else," wrote one commentator...

Author: By Maggie S. Tucker, | Title: This Board Is Not For the Bored | 2/23/1991 | See Source »

Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) was the most fertile artist of the 20th century, and immense quantities of ink have been spilt over his work. He was, you might say without too much exaggeration, both the last hero of Romantic culture and the first of the age of publicity: a prodigy of talent on permanent display in an age of mass media. No other artist, not even Michelangelo, had been famous in quite this way before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Portrait of The Young Artist: A LIFE OF PICASSO, VOL. I by John Richardson | 2/18/1991 | See Source »

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