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Still, some tobacco watchers think the innovation has the potential to transform the industry. Says Marc Cohen, a consumer-goods expert at the Sanford C. Bernstein investment firm: "The $64,000 question is: How will consumers react to it? Will smokers be satisfied? Will nonsmokers be satisfied?" If the answer is yes, the smoggy poker game, and other familiar scenes, could become a thing of the past...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Where There's No Smoke | 9/28/1987 | See Source »

...telling measure of parental attention is homework. A 1984 study of San Francisco-area schools by Stanford Sociologist Sanford Dornbusch found that Asian-American students put in an average of eleven hours a week, compared with seven hours by other students. Westinghouse Prizewinner John Kuo recalls that in Taiwan he was accustomed to studying two or three hours a night. "Here we had half an hour at the most." To make up the difference, John and his two brothers were often given extra assignments at home. "Asian parents spend much more time with their children than American parents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The New Whiz Kids | 8/31/1987 | See Source »

...opinions strongly upholding free-speech rights. He supported the press in a much cited 1984 libel suit against Syndicated Columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, proposing that "those who place themselves in a political arena must accept a degree of derogation that others need not." Says Libel Lawyer Bruce Sanford: "There hasn't been an opinion more favorable to the press in a decade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Battle Begins | 7/13/1987 | See Source »

...keeping government and other institutions honest, and allows plenty of margin for genuine error -- even when the error is damaging, intrusive and unconfessed. "Libel law gives an enormous protection to the media, which, when it's explained to people, they don't much like," says Washington Attorney Bruce Sanford. "The public loves the ((media)) product but hates the process...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PRESS Jousts Without Winners | 7/6/1987 | See Source »

Stuck with the emptiness of a foregone conclusion, Vidal improvises diversions to fill in the space. One involves Caroline Sanford's battle with her half brother Blaise over their late father's $15 million estate. Temporarily blocked from her share, Caroline sells four Poussin paintings, buys a money-losing Washington newspaper, and spices it up with sensationalisms a la Hearst, the man whom Blaise admires as "something new and strange and potent." Hay muses, "The contest was now between the high- minded few, led by Roosevelt, and Hearst, the true inventor of the modern world. What Hearst arbitrarily decided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Veneer of the Gilded Age EMPIRE | 6/22/1987 | See Source »

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