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...governors to endorse President Reagan's budget cuts last year, King remains one of the small number of governors of either party to back the President. While more and more loyal Republican executives are questioning the effect of the New Federalism on the states, King remains a consistent friendly visitor to the White House...

Author: By Jacos M. Schlesinger, | Title: A Conservative Governor, King Focuses on Taxes | 2/16/1982 | See Source »

...upon Haig by the Reagan circle, the two developed a solid relationship. Haig, while ever anxious to protect his own turf, has even shown some deference to his recent subordinate. Officials calling on Clark get an instant reminder of why such protocol is prudent. The first ornament striking a visitor's eye is a large photograph dating from 1968 of three smiling men on horseback: Clark, his father and Ronald Reagan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Man in the Basement | 2/15/1982 | See Source »

When Lidiya Vashchenko, 30, was admitted to Moscow's Botkin Hospital Jan. 30, her weight had dropped from 115 Ibs. to 84 Ibs., and she was dehydrated. Still she refused to eat until doctors threatened force-feeding. A visitor from the Illinois-based Christian Legal Society last week reported that Vashchenko was out of intensive care and "in good spirits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: End Game | 2/15/1982 | See Source »

...puttering around in a tweed jacket that he had inherited from his father; he eventually bequeathed it to one of his four sons. He was squirishly indifferent to many of the conventional social graces; his wife even more so. He served martinis mixed with Argentine vermouth. They were, one visitor recalls, "about the color of spar varnish." The President liked wild game and carved it expertly, so admirers regularly sent him venison and antelope and partridges, but Eleanor squeamishly banished such things from the White House table. Her own specialty was to cook and serve Sunday-night scrambled eggs, which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: God's Gift to the U.S.A.: Franklin Delano Roosevelt | 2/1/1982 | See Source »

Compared to the 25-yard-by-50-meter expanse of swimming lanes, the diving well is an unobtrusive nook in Blodgett Pool. If not for the platform tower stretching nearly eight meters above the floor, a first-time visitor to Blodgett might miss the well altogether. But in this deep pond, the Harvard divers, men's and women's, the best divers in the East, fly through the air with the greatest of ease, practicing perfect tucks and knife-like entries...

Author: By L. JOSEPH Garcia, | Title: Harvard Diving | 1/27/1982 | See Source »

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