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...first half proved to be a punters' duel, with each team punting four times in the first 30 minutes. The only scoring threat came when Crimson placekicker Robert Steinberg missed a 43-yard field goal attempt just before halftime...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Freshman Football Downs UMass, 6-0; White Scampers for TD in Last Minute | 10/2/1982 | See Source »

...FAVORITE YEAR Directed by Richard Benjamin Screenplay by Norman Steinberg and Dennis Palumbo

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Swann's Way | 9/27/1982 | See Source »

...vintage cartoon by Saul Steinberg shows a baroque room, all gold and curlicues; in it, a maestro is delicately prodding at a canvas filled with a grid of straight lines - a Mondrian, pure and polemical, red-yellow-blue-gray-white-black, utterly incongruous against the florid décor of the 19th century. How could Europe produce the painting within 70 years or so of finishing the room? That in effect is the question posed by "De Stijl, 1917-1931: Visions of Utopia," an exhibition that opened last month at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Impersonal Best: On to Utopia | 3/15/1982 | See Source »

...business grew they took precautions: changing telephone numbers frequently, talking in code, using electronic black boxes to conceal the locations from which they spoke. Yet at heart, the dealers remained kids who believed they would never be caught. The downhill slide started when Steinberg directed one operation from a Fort Lauderdale hotel room. Calls to his extension tied up the entire switchboard; a suspicious owner called the police. The gang scrambled out the windows but left behind marijuana, 7 Ibs. of cocaine (value: $180,000) and $1.2 million in cash, plus meticulous account books and records. It took police...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life in the Drug Trade | 11/23/1981 | See Source »

Convicted under an organized-crime statute, Steinberg languishes in a South Florida jail, facing possible life imprisonment. To mollify prosecutors, he handed over $2 million, his last remaining assets from a business that once reaped a $12 million profit in 90 days. His marriage broken, his friends in jail, his career ended, Steinberg still sees himself as much the same gentle youth who served as a medic in Viet Nam for eight months in 1968. Says he: "Marijuana doesn't hurt anybody. We never saw ourselves as really doing anything wrong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life in the Drug Trade | 11/23/1981 | See Source »

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