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...first time Cousy began to question the toll that winning was taking on him psychologically and physically. Cousy confesses that the book originally was intended to be an expose of college recruiting practices, and he does devote a section of the book to talking about the coaching violations. His own bending of the NCAA rules, which he felt was necessary to make a winning team, made him wonder what the drive to win was doing to him morally...

Author: By Andrew P. Quigley, | Title: Winning at All Costs: Two Perspectives | 11/18/1975 | See Source »

...case of "distemper." So many demands are made of the all too vulnerable system that it is in danger of breaking down. Or, as Daniel Patrick Moynihan, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, writes: "Even our sense of peoplehood grows uncertain as ethnic assertions take their implacable toll on the civic assumption of unity." Like monarchy in the 19th century, adds Moynihan, liberal democracy "is where the world was, not where it is going...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE FUTURE: Needed for America: Fewer Claims, More Growth | 11/10/1975 | See Source »

...advancing age began taking its inexorable toll, Francisco Franco periodically pledged to his countrymen that he would rule Spain only "as long as God gives me life and a clear mind." It was apparent last week that the pledge was soon to come due, despite the determination with which the 82-year-old Generalissimo clung to the absolute power he had been wielding for nearly four decades. Severely weakened by a series of heart attacks, Western Europe's last dictator at week's end was barely hanging on to life. As the last rites of the Roman Catholic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPAIN: AFTER FRANCO: HOPE AND FEAR | 11/3/1975 | See Source »

...sides hurled rockets and mortars at each other; the well-armed fedayeen even fired antiaircraft guns at the Phalange areas. As the fighting spread to other neighborhoods (see map), banks again closed, and merchants took goods from their stores to the relative safety of their homes. The toll of last week's clashes: 72 dead, raising the total killed since the start of the fighting last April to more than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LEBANON: Living on the Roller Coaster | 10/27/1975 | See Source »

...individual rights and liberty are to be ignored, there are many ways to reduce crime, death, and violence. Far more people are killed in drunken driving accidents each year than in murders or accidents by handguns. Where are the calls to ban liquor because "the death toll mounts"? Or crime and death could be reduced by repealing the right of the accused to refuse to testify against himself or abolishing the requirements for warrants before the police can search a person's home. But such actions would be unjustifiable infringements on individual rights, just as a handgun ban would...

Author: By Peter J. Ferrara, | Title: People vs. Buckley | 10/25/1975 | See Source »

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