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...column "The Presidency" and has covered every national election since 1960, an equally exciting dateline is Small Town America. Beginning this week, Sidey will rove more often through his favorite byways. In addition to his White House column, he will contribute dispatches from around the country under the rubric "Hugh Sidey's America." Says he: "I will go exploring in the open spaces that lie between the great urban centers, trying to figure out what's changing out there, what moves those special people who cling to the land through economic and natural hardship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: From The Publisher: Sep 24 1990 | 9/24/1990 | See Source »

...presents a clearer picture of Robertson. Her academic world has combined a new Harvard discipline, women's studies, with the traditional fields of history and literature in a combined concentration. She has placed the Emersons and Whitmans alongside feminist theorists like Betty Friedan and Simone de Beauvoir under the rubric of her field...

Author: By Susan D. Wojcicki, | Title: Witty Woman | 6/7/1990 | See Source »

...catalog under the heading of "Faculty of the Committee on Degrees in Women's Studies." Certainly, her departure will be felt most keenly by those scholars--in all disciplines--who work together on feminist topics. And, yes, her work is valued most by those who come together under the rubric of women's studies...

Author: By Susan B. Glasser, | Title: Women's Studies Needs Respect | 2/8/1990 | See Source »

...Soviet army looks more like a lot of bewildered 17-year-olds, many of them far from their backward, non- Russian homelands, bouncing around in the back of clunky trucks on potholed roads leading nowhere useful to their country's devastated economy. Yet they are counted under the ominous rubric of 4.25 million men under arms in the Warsaw Pact. So are over a million troops, most of them draftees, from the East European states. They include some of the same Hungarians who chanted, "Russians Go Home!"; the same Czechoslovaks, many of army age, who thronged into Wenceslas Square...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rethinking The Red Menace | 1/1/1990 | See Source »

...Artist Peter Max vanished from the international art scene and devoted the next 16 years to painterly experimentation and travel. But now Max is back. At Manhattan's Jack gallery last week, the Berlin-born artist opened a show of 30 gaily colored paintings and graphics under the rubric "Peter Max Celebrates America." Cheap the artist is not: his works on various patriotic themes are selling for anywhere from $12,000 to $50,000. So has Max joined the Establishment? "My art was patriotic in the '60s," he insists. "I was close to both Presidents and hippies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jul. 13, 1987 | 7/1/1987 | See Source »

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