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There are those who doubt that the D.C. General program alone is sufficient to keep such children out of the foster-care system in the long run. One skeptic is Dr. Sidney Jones, the hospital's chief of obstetrics and gynecology. "The idea of a three-month outpatient program is a joke," he says. "I want money for a house where these women can live for a year." Donna Carson, founder of the Atlanta program, agrees: "A lot of mothers will abandon their babies after they get home because their life isn't working. They need long-term support...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mother-and-Child Reunion | 1/24/1994 | See Source »

...last, a post-control-freak third way seems within reach in New York City. Suddenly, even a skeptic can imagine that 42nd Street stretching west from Times Square -- America's most famous city block, glamorous turned squalid and now comatose -- might really be on the verge of revivification. Of course, there have been grand plans before: in 1954 LIFE magazine said a new antisleaze law meant that "42nd Street will probably never again" be as tawdry as it was then (which was considerably less tawdry than it became...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spectator Can 42nd Street Be Born Again? | 9/27/1993 | See Source »

...Night Manager. For starters, there is the title character, who is (as usual) a slippery outsider, a "refined impostor" in search of a conscience (or a mission at least), and like nearly all Le Carre protagonists, half German and half English (which is to say, half romantic and half skeptic). A night manager in discreet hotels, Pine is, by definition, a "close observer" of people, a spy -- or novelist -- without a cause. In this instance his eye is trained largely on a glamorous slice of the "English leisure class": a jet-setting arms dealer, Dicky Roper, who is charming enough...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Civil Wars In the Soul | 7/12/1993 | See Source »

...April, she had learned the ropes. There is a rule on the Hill that if you can't explain it, you can't pass it. When she briefed the committee, the clarity of her pitch opened a few eyes. Says committee chief of staff Lawrence O'Donnell, a confirmed skeptic on Hillary's efforts: "I haven't been in the company of anyone that made me suspend my disbelief on health care until today. I'll come to my senses, but for the moment she was in the room, I believed she could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At The Center Of POWER | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

Instead of the Artist as Star, we have the Artist as Victim, or as Victim's Representative. The key to the show, the skeptic might say, is its inclusion of the tape of the police bashing of Rodney King taken by George Holliday, a plumbing-parts salesman not known for his artistic aspirations before or since. The '93 Biennial is anxious to present all its artists as witnesses, just like Holliday. Witnesses to what? To their own feelings of exclusion and marginalization. To a world made bad for blacks, Latinos, gays, lesbians and women in general...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Whitney Biennial: A Fiesta of Whining | 3/22/1993 | See Source »

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