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...time to sort out important issues," says Secretary of Agriculture John Block of his open-road hours as a long-distance runner. Ruminating and running, Block, 46, looked as cool as an Illinois-grown cucumber as he glided across the finish line of the 85th Boston Marathon in 3 hr. 6 min. 49 sec. Still, Block was well to the rear of Toshihiko Seko, 24, a compact Japanese import who set a U.S. marathon record of 2:09:26, and New Zealander Allison Roe, 24, who came from down under and well back in the pack of 6,845 runners...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 4, 1981 | 5/4/1981 | See Source »

...intend to become a concert pianist," he says, and he will allow nothing to stand in his way. "I've been known to practice until five in the morning," he continues. "I really find it quite pleasant concentrating for such long periods of time--sort of like running the marathon." He adds with a grin, "Of course the chair helps...

Author: By Sarah Paul, | Title: Practice Made Perfect? | 5/1/1981 | See Source »

Perhaps this is all the reflection of a culture fed up with liars. We are tired of Rosie Ruiz pretending to win the Boston Marathon, tired of watching a psychic and three networks show us a miraculous, false prediction of the assassination attempt. We are trying to forget that a Pulitzer Prize-winning news story was totally fictitious. We have already forgotten we had a president and secretary of state who lied through their teeth, and instead have made them best-selling authors...

Author: By David M. Handelman, | Title: The Horror, The Horror | 5/1/1981 | See Source »

When I first decided to run the Boston Marathon--a rather spontaneous decision that came only two weeks before the race--I have to admit it was mainly to emulate one of my childhood heros, George Plympton. Old George would go out and do something extraordinary, then limp back to his typewriter and tell the world how terrifying it all was. I could just envision myself laid up in my hospital bed, dictating the headline of my story: On Her Last Legs--Special to The Crimson, UHS. Looking back on the events of last Monday. I can now laugh...

Author: By Sara J. Nicholas, | Title: Beyond Heartbreak Hill | 4/27/1981 | See Source »

Faced with large supplies and low sales, oil companies are paying lower prices for crude or refusing to buy it. Standard Oil of California, which markets under the Chevron brand, Phillips Petroleum and Marathon Oil have all announced that they are cutting by $1 per bbl. the amount they will pay for certain grades of domestically produced crude. Atlantic Richfield has reduced purchases from Nigeria by 60,000 bbl. a day, and industry experts say that Ashland Oil has indefinitely suspended purchases of some 90,000 bbl. a day of crude from Mexico, along with another 17,000 bbl. daily...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Big Oil's Surprising Problems | 4/27/1981 | See Source »

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