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...that if Starr lacks clear evidence of obstruction, the decent thing for him to do is stop and file a report; perhaps the decent thing for Clinton to do is tell the truth and then spend a month in a monastery. But decency is a concept that gets more traction in a culture in which shame matters, like Japan, where the CEOs resign when an airplane crashes. America has always been too big, too fractious for shame to work very well--and there are too many places to start over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Cost Of It All | 8/24/1998 | See Source »

...ways to highlight Clinton's embarrassing China dealings in advance of the President's visit to Beijing in June. The strategy appears to be working. Though the China connection may have nothing to do with Clinton's decision to grant the waiver, it is giving Republicans a kind of traction the Lewinsky scandal never...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Red Face Over China | 6/1/1998 | See Source »

Kaminer did not end the discussion withoutfocusing on a few pieces of art that she saidoffended her. She cited Quentin Traction's PulpFiction as a movie she felt was full ofgratuitous violence...

Author: By Sarah C. Haskins, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Kaminer Addresses Pornography, 1st Amendment | 4/22/1998 | See Source »

Just as her grievance charging that DreamWorks stole her ideas for Amistad was getting some traction, novelist BARBARA CHASE-RIBOUD got stuck in her own little plagiarism mess. A New York Times reporter doing research on eunuchs (hey, they've got a lot of sections to fill now) discovered that one chapter in Chase-Riboud's Valide: A Novel of the Harem has seven instances--some as many as 600 words in length--lifted directly from a 1936 nonfiction work on harems. Chase-Riboud is continuing her $10 million lawsuit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Dec. 29, 1997 | 12/29/1997 | See Source »

Regaining traction will require what Jobs last week called "a new paradigm." Just what this might consist of, though, is unclear. Build low-cost network computers? Split up into hardware and software siblings? Or just rely on next year's expected release of the post-Mac operating system, Rhapsody, based on Jobs' NeXT technology, which Apple shelled out $424 million for last winter? True believers call Rhapsody the greatest OS ever and Apple's savior (Tim Berners-Lee did invent the Web on it); skeptics call NeXT a marketplace failure and an albatross Apple should have left around Steve Jobs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: IF YOU CAN'T BEAT 'EM... | 8/18/1997 | See Source »

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