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...ocean liner QE 2 glides past the World Trade Center: elegant horizontal meeting towering verticals. The late afternoon sun lends pale, reflected fire, while the rest of the sky fills up with lowering clouds. How fortunate that Photographer George Forss, 40, happened to be there with his camera when all this happened. More fortunate still, Forss sells 11-in. by 14-in. copies of this photograph, exquisitely printed and carefully matted, for only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Photography: One-Man Museum Without Walls | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

...modern life," and he is clearly not in it for the money. Precarious as the sidewalk trade may be, he still feels free to take a week off with his cameras and haunt the urban landscape, waiting and looking for a particular shot-the confluence, say, of the liner and the towers -that seems worth saving. Selling his own work gives him quality control and a flexible schedule, but Forss barely notices the potential customers who cluster around his display. He keeps looking at the light and wondering whether it is striking a building or bridge in a way that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Photography: One-Man Museum Without Walls | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

Over the Jewish prayer question? Not at all. The issue was the Bible and how it shall be taught. A Southern Baptist president has one notable power: indirect control over nominations to boards that run the six Southern Baptist seminaries. Smith, like his predecessor, is a scriptural hard-liner who believes the Bible is "in-errant," free of errors in all matters spiritual and historical. Inerrantists believe, for example, that a whale actually swallowed Jonah and that Adam and Eve were individuals, not symbols. That is the faith of most grass-roots Southern Baptists but not necessarily of the seminary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Bible Brouhaha | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

...straw-hatted, natty, top-lit look, which is that of a matinee idol portraying a gangster. Perhaps the best pure photography in the show is a picture of Robert Louis Stevenson. Ordinarily depicted as a dour, moody presence, Stevenson gave a photo to a fellow passenger on an ocean liner that meets Weston's dictum: it lays open a vital and engaging face. A forefinger of his clasped hands points outward like a conductor's baton, and intelligence, so rarely caught on film, dances in warm eyes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Photography: As They Wanted to Be Seen | 6/8/1981 | See Source »

Brandeis' Dwayne Follette lofted a looping liner to right which looked like it would drop in for a hit, sending Mike Fiala all the way to third. But Allard--the Crimson' rightfielder--lunged for and came up with the ball, and then threw to first baseman Vinnie Martelli for the double play...

Author: By Mark H. Doctoroff, | Title: Crimson Nine Overrules Judges, 8-2 | 5/7/1981 | See Source »

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