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...standards but still $17 cheaper than two years ago, thanks to a 74.8% appreciation in the dollar against the French franc. At ubiquitous Parisian cafes, steak and pommes frites cost only $4, and a glass of wine can be as little as an additional 60?. Said Elaine Lustig, a Virginian traveling with her husband, last week: "We've been eating outstanding meals for one-half or one-third of what they would cost in the States. I think it's fantastic." In Spain, U.S. visitors find their dollars going 25% further this year. Rental cars, expensive elsewhere, cost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World at Cut Rates | 11/8/1982 | See Source »

Perhaps Seigler, already convicted three times for robbery, calculated that if he was convicted for capital murder, he might be sent to the electric chair like Frank Coppola, a fellow Virginian executed two weeks ago. At 7:25 p.m., Seigler, ushered into the courtroom of Judge William E. Spain, accepted the deal. The jury, which had sent word of a verdict, was kept waiting while Spain approved the new plea. After Seigler was led away, the judge invited the jury into the room and informed them of the guilty plea. One juror slumped in a chair, while several others just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Plea No Bargain | 8/30/1982 | See Source »

...counts the Los Angeles Times, Long Island's Newsday and the Denver Post among its string of highly rated papers. The new owners started pumping in money and recruiting new blood from top papers across the country. In 1975 Executive Editor Kenneth Johnson, now 47, a tough West Virginian given to chainsmoking and chewing out reporters, was hired from his job as vice president at the Washington Post to revitalize the paper. His assessment of it at that time: "Provincial. The staff was too small and not aggressive enough. The scope of the coverage was too narrow." Within three...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Shootout in the Big D | 9/7/1981 | See Source »

Blackmun, who has moved increasingly to the left, probably works harder than the other judges on his decisions, which often reflect his ad hoc, personal sense of right and wrong. The courtly Virginian, Lewis Powell, is regarded as the great balancer, in the middle on almost every case. John Paul Stevens, the most original thinker on the court, is an iconoclastic loner who likes to file separate opinions that challenge old assumptions even when his conclusions coincide with those of his brothers. Byron White, the best pure lawyer on the court, is unpredictably liberal and unpredictably conservative, but meticulously careful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Brethren's First Sister: Sandra Day O'Connor, | 7/20/1981 | See Source »

...taken but place. the "happy The federal system was messy from the beginning. Literate Americans were sharply aware of the confusion of powers the Constitution would create. States'-righters like Patrick Henry knew that a pre-eminent national Government was proposed Said he: "This Government is not a Virginian, but an American Government." Nationalists like James Wilson clearly declared that the Constitution was to serve not theory but people-"Can we forget for whom we are forming a Government? Is it for men, or for the imaginary beings called states?" Indeed, arguments over the mess the Constitution was about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: States' Rights and Other Myths | 2/9/1981 | See Source »

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