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Yale, which must slash an $11 million athletic budget by $560,000, will retire the varsity men's water-polo and wrestling teams and the junior varsity men's hockey team. Disgruntled Eli captains said they had been targeted because of low attendance and Title IX regulations, which compel universities to offer equal athletic opportunities to men and women...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPORTS Dropping The Ball | 5/6/1991 | See Source »

That pitiless gaze was focused on Nancy Reagan last week by Kitty Kelley, America's premier slash biographer. The resulting furor caused even some die- hard Nancy haters to feel a sympathetic twinge or two for the former First Lady. Nancy Reagan: The Unauthorized Biography (Simon & Schuster) went on sale across the nation just as newspapers and TV newscasts began to revel in the book's most sensational allegations. Many bookstores sold out their copies within hours. Aggrieved parties cried foul, Johnny Carson made jokes and guardians of journalistic integrity shook their heads. The New York Times, which trumpeted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The First Lady And the Slasher | 4/22/1991 | See Source »

...literary phenomenon, there is less to Nancy Reagan than meets the eye. Kitty Kelley is hardly the only slash-and-burn chronicler currently at work. Her smartest move has been to choose living victims for her killer bios; speaking ill of the dead (Albert Goldman on Elvis and John Lennon, Arianna Stassinopoulos Huffington on Pablo Picasso) is profitable but a tad less sensational. And the instant renown achieved by Kelley's Nancy does not really signal the end of civilization as we have known it. Good, balanced, substantial biographies about controversial figures continue to appear and win notice. Last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pssst! Have You Heard the One About Augustus? | 4/22/1991 | See Source »

Some industries see pay for performance as one of their best bets for keeping jobs in the U.S. Despite a decade of restructuring, many companies remain desperate to slash payrolls further and get more bang for their labor bucks. "People are beginning to understand that the world is moving ahead at a fast clip and that global competition is so fierce that the future of American manufacturing industries is at stake," says Lawrence Bankowski, the Ohio-based president of the American Flint Glass Workers Union, which has lost nearly half its 36,000 members during the past 15 years. Concurs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Workers: Risks And Rewards | 4/15/1991 | See Source »

Moreover, Weld's decision to slash at least $500 million in local aid to Massachusetts cities and towns leaves mayors with few options other than to cut their police departments. That immediately eliminates opportunities to explore possible improvements in law enforcement, such as the creation of commissions to investigate charges of police brutality and better training programs...

Author: By Kristine M. Zaleskas, | Title: The War Next Door | 4/13/1991 | See Source »

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