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...could help protect the Reagan Revolution from paralysis for another two years, giving the party momentum as it heads into the '88 sweepstakes. Democrats would interpret a Republican defeat in the Senate as a sign of the public's dissatisfaction with Reagan's policies. An intransigent Democratic majority could thwart the Administration's legislative agenda, turning the President into a genuine lame duck and perhaps stealing some of the thunder from the Republicans in the contest to succeed Reagan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can the Democrats Recapture the Senate? | 10/6/1986 | See Source »

Last week Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger responded with understandable incredulity, describing the proposal as "pretty absurd." The Secretary emphasized the "historic separation of military and civilian activities that we've always had in our country, quite properly." He compared the House order to thwart drug trafficking in 1 1/2 months to the folly of King Canute, the 11th century monarch of England who, Weinberger said, "tried to order the tide not to come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Defense Demurs | 9/29/1986 | See Source »

...thwart Turner, Wyman authorized the repurchase of 21% of the company's stock for $150 a share, or $954 million. By contrast, Turner's offer was valued by Wall Street at about $130 a share, and the stock was then trading at about $118. In financing the purchase, CBS ran up its debt from $510 million to a high of $1.44 billion. Before last week Wyman had managed to bring the amount down to $780 million. To help do so, he sold off such assets as the CBS toy division, a 29% interest in the Tri-Star movie production firm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporate Shoot-Out At Black Rock | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

...would require the President to deploy, within 30 days after passage of the bill, military equipment and personnel to thwart drug trafficking. Although the posse comitatus act of 1878 generally forbids the armed forces from enforcing civil laws, the bill would allow the military to arrest dealers captured in "hot pursuit." Said David Westrake, an official of the Drug Enforcement Administration: "Increased military support is welcome and needed." But a variety of civil-liberties advocates immediately demurred, as did the Defense Department. Said Spokesman Robert Sims: "It is a bad precedent to use the Army as a police force." Other...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rolling Out the Big Guns | 9/22/1986 | See Source »

...National Party congress in Durban. When Botha's "manifesto for the future" proved to be largely a manifesto for more of the same, an international outcry ensued. Last week, as Botha returned to Durban to address a full party congress, officials tried a different tack, this one designed to thwart untoward expectations. One administrator warned foreign correspondents, "This speech is not for you. This is a speech for South Africans." Given the advance billing, it was hard to be disappointed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa Hard Words, Harsh Actions | 8/25/1986 | See Source »

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