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...YORK UNIVERSITY Saul Bellow, D.Let., novelist. Your writing, now intensely sad, now colloquial and witty, now philosophical, beautifully ranges intellectual sophistication alongside common speech and experience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Kudos: Round 3 | 6/22/1970 | See Source »

Haack, president of the aristocratic New York Stock Exchange, and Ralph Saul, president of the younger and more innovative American Stock Exchange, announced a program to end much costly duplication. Under the new plan, the two exchanges will share many of the same computer facilities, and Amex stocks will be included in the Big Board's central certificate service, an automated system for handling stock transactions. The cooperation will extend down to the clerical levels and may eventually result in a merger of the two exchanges. Economic necessity forced the moves -the exchanges have also been hurt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Bear Market for Brokers | 6/15/1970 | See Source »

...preparing for another assault next year, and last week in Detroit they held the "First Annual Convention on Corporate Responsibility." It was more like a rally than a convention, but it made plain that G.M. was only a test case. Other social critics are entering the proxy wars, notably Saul Alinsky's "Proxies for People," which plans to solicit proxies from foundations, union-welfare funds and other groups and to use them to pressure corporations into more diligently pursuing social goals. Alinsky calls his technique "mass ju-jitsu"; he is so sure of success that he confidently promises future...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Toward a Wider Constituency | 6/1/1970 | See Source »

...harassers at Honeywell and Commonwealth Edison also picked up tactical tips from Chicago's Saul Alinsky, the foundation-subsidized professional radical who regards conflict as a useful cathartic for social ills (TIME, March 2). "In all of my battles," says Alinsky, "I have never seen the other side so uptight as they have been on this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Corporation Becomes a Target | 5/11/1970 | See Source »

There is more clarity, too, in the N.E.B.'s description of sexual acts and bodily functions. Saul no longer enters a cave "to cover his feet," but "to relieve himself." To ensure that their camps would be fit for God's presence, Israelites are instructed to carry a trowel with them; "When you squat outside" the camp, orders Deuteronomy 23: 13, "you shall scrape a hole . . . and cover your excrement." Husbands and wives no longer "know" each other, but "have intercourse." The man struck down by untimely death in Job no longer has "breasts full of milk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The New English Bible: Back to Beginnings | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

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