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...total ambience apparently stimulates the instinct to buy. George Stuart, who, with designer wife Lyn, operates the women's boutique, claims: "We've had to restock the shop four times a day every day so far." Other retailers are doing almost as well. For some customers, however, Manhattan's newest divertissement will never quite replace Rexalls or Walgreens. Because of a New York State law that prevents their sale in an establishment that serves alcohol, no drugs are available in Le Drugstore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: Le Drugstore | 11/2/1970 | See Source »

...most elaborate fourth-market enterprise, Manhattan's Institutional Networks Corp., or "Instinct," enables clients to trade stocks over a private network of teletype machines linked to a computer. A client can consult Instinct's "offer file" for any of 1,550 stocks by punching keys on his teletype, which prints out a list. If a buyer spots an offer he wants, he can instruct the computer to connect him with a potential seller to dicker over the terms. To preserve the coveted anonymity, both parties are identified only by coded numbers. A deal is closed when a trader...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investment: The Rising Fourth Market | 10/26/1970 | See Source »

...mistress. "It is a story unusually lit with affection and nature," says Schell. "I decided only one photographer could really do it-Sven Nykvist, the artist who does Bergman's films. When he agreed I knew the picture would happen, and that it would work." Schell's instinct has proved infallible. Nykvist has filled the film with indelible imagery. The sunlight is a featured player of humor and warmth. Interiors seem to exhale melancholy. Weightless figures hover on the horizon and are swallowed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Robust Sickness | 10/19/1970 | See Source »

...first of K-State's Alfred M. Landon Lectures this year, a gracious presidential gesture to the 83-year-old Kansan who survived his humiliation in 1936 at the hands of Franklin Roosevelt to become a minor elder statesman of the Republican Party. K-State, as political instinct and the Secret Service informed Nixon, was a comparatively safe campus on which he could propound his ideas on radical violence; Nixon won the 1968 mock election there...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Nixon: The Pursuit of Peace and Politics | 9/28/1970 | See Source »

This book concludes a two-part biography begun 14 years ago with the publication of Roosevelt: The Lion and the Fox, a brilliant, admiring portrait of F.D.R. The first book focused sharply on the peculiar combination of idealism, political instinct and guile that allowed F.D.R. to bend events to his will in the exciting days of the various New Deals. The Soldier of Freedom necessarily takes a broader world view with far less penetrating results. Huge chunks of the book turn out to be rewrites of World War II history. Roosevelt is wheeled on and off the world stage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: F.D.R. in Wartime | 9/28/1970 | See Source »

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