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...lack of effort. In what Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown calls "the most intensive investigation ever conducted in the history of this city," the Georgia bureau of investigation is pitching in, the FBI is providing national crime-lab facilities, and a psychiatrist at Emory University is trying to develop profiles of the killer or killers. In addition, Atlanta officials have enlisted 450 fire-and policemen in an unprecedented twelve-hour-a-day, door-to-door canvass to ask residents if they have seen anything unusual and give them pictures of the missing children. Says Fireman William Eberhardt: "This...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Terror on Atlanta's South Side | 11/3/1980 | See Source »

...then they held a round-robin to see who could say the most sarcastic things about the other man's work." After two years in Cambridge, Lowell transferred to Kenyon College. His parents, furious that he would not return to Uncle Abbott's school, sent him to a psychiatrist...

Author: By Sarah L. Mcvitv, | Title: Of Lowells and Their Passions | 10/28/1980 | See Source »

...oldest Crane brother, Philip, 49, won election to Congress from Illinois on his first try, in 1969. Brother Daniel, 44, who also lives in Illinois, won on his second try, in 1978. Now Brother David, 43, a psychiatrist from Martinsville, Ind., is trying to win-on his third try. David Crane, a conservative Republican like his brothers, lost in 1976 by 19,000 votes to Democratic Congressman David Evans, 34, a former social studies teacher, and by 5,800 votes to Evans in 1978. Says the incumbent: "I don't know why he is running again. Maybe his family...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Two High-Tone Contests of Issues and Ideology | 10/20/1980 | See Source »

...first of the three, Silverman's Madame Adare. Using a libretto by Richard Foreman, his longtime collaborator, the composer has written a fantasy, or more precisely a phantasmagoria, about psychoanalysis and creativity. As the piece begins, Miss Adare, played by Soprano Carol Gutknecht, is seeing her psychiatrist Dr. Hoffman (Bass-Baritone Richard Cross). Her problem: she cannot make up her mind whether she wants to be an opera star or a movie star, and while she dallies, she cannot even make enough money to pay for her sessions. When Hoffman refuses to treat her again until she pays...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Opera Is Still Alive in New York | 10/20/1980 | See Source »

...certainly better for art when he does. Watching most psychotherapy in action is not all that different from watching a colostomy, or any other doctor-work; among other things, it makes for lousy dialogue, and Ordinary People is full of it, endless psychobabbled colloquys between Conrad and his psychiatrist (Jewish, of course) who smokes cigarettes, drinks bottomless cups of coffee, wears shawl-collared cardigans to the office, and agrees to be Conrad's "friend" for 50 bucks an hour. It seems as if Redford should be satirizing this too, all these people saying "Do you want to talk about...

Author: By Paul A. Attanasio, | Title: La Vie Quotidienne | 10/15/1980 | See Source »

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