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...shattering defeat in the Gulf War, the Iraqi dictator remains in full control of the Baghdad government. Though he has lost his hold on Kurdistan in the north and over parts of the Shi'ite south, he has bottled up the insurgents in both regions so they do not threaten his rule. Every step he takes has been aimed at buttressing his authority. He rebuilt Baghdad and the central region, where his Sunni Muslim backers hold sway; he gives government workers and members of the armed forces regular pay increases and relentlessly bombards the nation with self-serving propaganda...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saddam, Still | 3/29/1993 | See Source »

Kravis doesn't get off so easily. Clearly Pryce, a tall, refined, dapper Welshman, bears no physical or cultural resemblance to the short, nouveau- riche, noncharismatic Kravis. Moreover, the aloof Pryce does not seem like the sort of person who would ever threaten to break both of a society columnist's kneecaps at a benefit, as Kravis reportedly once did. In fact, Pryce does not look like the sort of person who would threaten to break even one of a society columnist's kneecaps. Nevertheless, his performance works, in part because he is so understatedly malevolent, in part because...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Barbarians on The Screen | 3/22/1993 | See Source »

Prominent former custodians of public trust can also help defuse image problems that threaten to snarl deals. For example, Carlyle became the adviser to Saudi Prince al-Waleed bin Talal in his $590 million investment in Citicorp in 1991. The firm subsequently teamed with France's state-owned Thomson-CSF to outbid U.S. defense giants for the missile and aircraft divisions of LTV last year. Such global connections can be controversial. "The one significant problem for Carlyle is that they've been on the foreign side of controversial transactions," says a Washington lobbyist and rival dealmaker. But Carlyle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Peddling Power For Profit | 3/22/1993 | See Source »

While everyone is getting comfortable with CDs and cassette tapes, the industry has come up with two competing options that threaten to make existing technologies obsolete. One is called a minidisc, the other a digital compact cassette. Like the popular CDs, they are each digital, which means electronically perfect sound with no static. But unlike CDs, you can record on both new devices, and they are very portable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Digital Dilemma | 3/1/1993 | See Source »

Eric, played by Bill Selig, visits his school library where a mousey lunatic, played by Catherine Robe, has commenced a killing spree. Jane, the schizophrenic killer, holds Eric hostage while a gang of sadistic police threaten to storm the building...

Author: By John Aboud, | Title: Mismatched Bookends at the Loeb Experimental Theatre | 2/25/1993 | See Source »

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