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...start Hollender was as relentless in recruiting instructors as he is in attracting students. He would walk into a gourmet shop and ask the owner to teach a course in opening a food store. But today experts come to him asking to teach; he accepts only 10% to 15% of the applicants. Teachers earn an average of $30 to $40 an hour, and can make as much as $12,000 a year teaching one course a week. But for many the rewards are more than monetary. Says Rand: "Anyone who works hard all day and enrolls in this kind...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Fast Food for the Brain | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

...airline's decline has been relentless. It was hit with the problems that face the whole industry: soaring fuel costs caused by higher oil prices, sharply increased competition from subsidized foreign airlines and the start of deregulation of the U.S. airline industry. Saddled with older, fuel-guzzling airplanes, oppressive union wages and losses on most of its long-distance hauls because of the sluggish world economy, Pan Am's fortunes sank...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: An Early Takeoff at Pan Am | 7/20/1981 | See Source »

...Mornings on Horseback finally lacks the salient characteristic of the Roosevelts-enthusiasm. In spite of Teddy's strenuous self-improvement and relentless selfdiscipline, McCullough finds something spoiled about the prig who talks of keeping himself "pure," for some "rare and radiant maiden" and postures for the camera as "the plainsman" in custom-tailored buckskins with dagger and sheath from Tiffany. The author appears to prefer Black Sheep Elliott, who, lacking what he called his brother's "foolish grit," collapsed under the responsibility of being a Roosevelt, although surviving long enough to father Eleanor, the wife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Foolish Grit | 7/20/1981 | See Source »

...roam government's many corridors, endure hours of legislative watch, hover around police stations, pursue nature's floods and disasters. A latticework of such reporting all around the world is gathered by a jointly owned collective, the Associated Press, and its rival United Press International. At a relentless high-speed rate of 1,200 words a minute, 24 hours a day, the wire services supply the printed press, give radio disc jockeys their "rip and read" news, and alert television producers where to dispatch their camera crews...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch: Trusting the Deliveryman Most | 7/6/1981 | See Source »

...some way he seems such a modern artist. There is, to begin with, the relentless autophagy: the cannibalizing, part by part, of his own images in numerous variations, a self-reflexive mode of invention that one associates more with Picasso than anyone earlier. This point is brought home dramatically by the gallery of motifs from The Gates of Hell, from The Thinker itself (originally meant to be the central figure over the doorway, a Dante dreaming the whole Inferno) to the battalion of flying, crouching, writhing figures, bare forked animals all, that crowd the plinths...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Old Man and the Clay | 7/6/1981 | See Source »

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