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...purses stuffed with an assortment of bills. It took clerks an hour to count the currency, which totaled $100,000. A Chase banker recalled the women's saying that the money came from street sales of flowers by members of Moon's Unification Church. The Moonies, who refer to their leader as "Father," and who regard him as a manifestation of God, were zealous collectors of funds, and deposits to his Chase accounts were frequent-perhaps too frequent. In a New York City federal court last week, a jury of ten women and two men decided, after four...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Guilty Father | 5/31/1982 | See Source »

...moonscape that only a nomad could love. What he wanted was the northwestern 20% of the territory, which contained the main towns of El Aaiun and Smara as well as the phosphate mines at Bu Craa. Hassan decided to protect his claim to this area, which he began to refer to as the "useful Sahara," by literally building a wall around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Morocco: An Exercise in Amity | 5/31/1982 | See Source »

...refer to the Crimson article of May 13th, in which Mr. Barak Goodman states that "a bruising shell from Yale took a narrow victory from the heavies" at the 1981 EARC sprints. How is this possible? Last year's sprints fell in the middle of exams, and thus Harvard did not on Lake Quinsigamond last year. Geoffrey S. Knauth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: To Race or Not to Race | 5/19/1982 | See Source »

...visual medium--more so than the stage on which I Ought to be in Pictures was originally performed: he seems to put his own work on a secondary level to the screenwriter's. This is not a Herbert Ross film: the opening credits and the advertisements, in fact, refer to it as "Neil Simon's I Ought to be in Pictures...

Author: By Lewis DE Simon, | Title: The Goodbye Playwright | 5/13/1982 | See Source »

...name, chosen by Texas Senator John Tower, was always intended to refer to the port city of 332,000 rather than the sacrament of the Eucharist. But many Roman Catholic priests and bishops insisted that selecting such a name for a warship that may well be armed with nuclear-tipped missiles was, in the words of Bishop Thomas Drury of Corpus Christi, "very nearly sacrilegious." Lehman, a Catholic, replied that church doctrine recognized the "unavoidable necessity of building and operating deterrent systems." Nonetheless, the protests swelled, and Representative Tony Hall, an Ohio Democrat, introduced a House resolution demanding a name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sinking a Name | 5/10/1982 | See Source »

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