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...their own. resources, moreover, daily editors now have a broader range of syndicated news and features to choose from, including stories from reporters at eight of the journals that made this year's list of the ten best (the exceptions: the Des Moines Register and the St. Petersburg Times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: The Ten Best U.S. Dailies | 4/30/1984 | See Source »

...Florida Gov. Reubin O. Askew, though one Mondale organizer there calls that figure "bullshit." Askew's former campaign manager has also moved into Hart's camp. Hart should also profit from the lack of any real organized labor in the state, says John Harwood, political reporter for the St. Petersburg Times. Harwood calls Florida "really a bunch of city states, a state that's really fragmented and [where] media's really important...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Look at the South | 3/12/1984 | See Source »

...different frames takes us from St. Petersburg. Mo., down the Mississippi--"flowing" into the middle of the stage in Heidi Landesman's creative sets. Following the well-known plot, Jim and Huck join forces in running away; Jim hopes to escape slavery, while Huck is running away from folk who want to "civilize" him. Ironically, the production falters precisely because Huck is too civilized. Huck's dual role as both narrator and protagonist is, at times, problematic. While in the "active" mode, he is scrambling about to keep the action going. Then, stopping dead in his tracks, he turns...

Author: By Hanne-maria Maijala, | Title: Downstream | 3/9/1984 | See Source »

...years covered here pummeled Dostoevsky into the figure the world now remembers. Before then, he had been a promising young writer, fashionable for a while but then sliding out of favor in the volatile literary world of St. Petersburg...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Crime and Punishment | 1/30/1984 | See Source »

When Dostoevsky returned to St. Petersburg, late in 1859, he was approaching 40, mired in an unhappy marriage and faced with the task of building his literary reputation all over again. His great works were still years away. Biographer Frank, 65, a professor of comparative literature at Princeton, promises that the "third volume is in the final stages of revision, and should not take too long to appear after the publication of the present...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Crime and Punishment | 1/30/1984 | See Source »

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