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Walser's apocalyptic vision stole a march on the many literary ones that were to follow in this century. So did he also help invent what later became a modernist stereotype: the passive, clerkly man who must find ways of passing time while waiting for the end. In The Job Application, Walser portrays a degree of diffidence that borders on catatonia: "I know that your good firm is large, proud, old, and rich, thus I may yield to the pleasing supposition that a nice, easy, pretty little place would be available, into which, as into a kind of warm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Out of Limbo | 9/20/1982 | See Source »

Nonsense, counters Sidney Glugover, who counsels elderly shoplifters in Florida's Broward County: "Feinberg and the other social scientists like to invent poetic theories about alienated subcultures. Economics is at the root of the crime. If you want a theory for what they're doing, you can call it 'dollar stretch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Old Enough to Know Better | 9/20/1982 | See Source »

More receptive than whom? Than those who follow public affairs more closely? Decidedly. The Reagan Administration, more than any before it, aims its message to the big television audiences and wastes little time on those who want to follow the fine print. Reagan obviously didn't invent the homely example: Remember how Roosevelt shrewdly argued for Lend-Lease to Britain, justifying it as lending a hose to a neighbor to put out a fire? Nor did Reagan invent the bite-size explanation of policy. Gergen, from his speechwriting days for Richard Nixon, remembers Nixon's insistence that press...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch: The Bite Without the Sting | 8/16/1982 | See Source »

...measure, herpes is an extraordinary bug. "It is the ultimate parasite," declares University of Michigan Microbiologist Charles Shipman. Says Washington, D.C., Urologist Peter Gross: "If you were doing a science-fiction movie, you couldn't invent something better than herpes." What makes it unique is that unlike influenza and other viruses, it survives in the human body. long after an attack has subsided. Once herpes has found its way into your system, says Dr. Harold Kessler, a Chicago specialist in infectious disease, "it's your virus for life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Battling an Elusive Invader | 8/2/1982 | See Source »

...sort of sitting on their hands, you know. They've been pushing forward and developing new systems and letting the technology lead them. Now we have these weapons, now it's up to the decision-makers to figure out the reason for their use....We have to now really invent. I would submit, a doctrine to explain, to rationalize, the need for the numbers of weapons that we have. And it's true I think on the Soviet side as well...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Deterrence, the 'Freeze,' the Future | 6/10/1982 | See Source »

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