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...worked out that way. Directors have generally been content either to substitute handsome actors for the singers supplying the sound track or simply to shoot a stage production. A breakthrough came in 1975, when Ingmar Bergman produced a charming The Magic Flute that began in a replica of Stockholm's 18th century Drottningholm Court Theater and from time to time moved beyond the confines of the stage. Even more ambitious was Joseph Losey's mesmeric Don Giovanni (1979), expansively set amid the Palladian splendors of northern Italy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Through the Looking Glass | 1/24/1983 | See Source »

...HISTORIC Stockholm Conference in 1972, conservationists first made the world aware that natural resources are finite. The meeting kicked off environmentalist movements in number of countries, as people and groups began to realize that the traditional global pattern of resource consumption without regard for the future could lead to disaster. Today, a relatively small circle of concerned scientists have launched a similar campaign to end the wholesale destruction of a little-known endangered resource--the tropical rain forest...

Author: By Errol T. Louis, | Title: Burning a Resource | 12/1/1982 | See Source »

When University of Chicago Professor George Stigler travels to Stockholm next month to accept the Nobel Prize, he will experience firsthand a bittersweet phenomenon of the U.S economy. Stigler's Nobel Prize carries a cash award of 1.15 million Swedish kroner, which until only a few weeks ago was the equivalent of $182,000. Since then the Swedish government, pressed by the rising value of the U.S. dollar as well as its own economic problems, has devalued the krona. When Stigler finally receives his award, he will actually get only about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Too Strong for Its Own Good | 11/8/1982 | See Source »

Last Thursday in Mexico City, where García Márquez resides in an elite suburb with his wife Mercedes, a flustered maid served coffee while the shy, stout author made plans to accept his award in Stockholm. He intends to wear the traditional Mexican guayabera, a lightweight shirt worn outside the trousers. Said he: "To avoid putting on a tuxedo, I'll stand the cold." The creator of fictional ice, amnesia and ascending bedsheets could hardly do otherwise...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nobel Prizes: Magic, Matter and Money | 11/1/1982 | See Source »

...prostaglandin chemistry" and last week an even greater honor, the Nobel Prize in Medicine. The 66-year-old Swede shared the award and $157,500 with two other pioneers of PG research: Bengt Samuelsson, 48, a former student of Bergström's and his colleague at Stockholm's Karolinska Institute, and British Pharmacologist John Vane, 55, of Wellcome Research Laboratories in Beckenham, England. All three received the news in Boston, where they were helping to celebrate Harvard Medical School's bicentennial. All three professed surprise at the early-morning call from Stockholm. Though Bergstrom is chairman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Sharing the Nobel Prize | 10/25/1982 | See Source »

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