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Julian (Richard Gere) makes his living in the nicer precincts of Los Angeles by providing sexual services to well-off middle-aged ladies. He is pretty, smartly dressed and inarticulate when any serious subject comes up; yet one can understand what a neglected wife might see in him. His power with women derives not from being aggressively male but from being ingratiatingly sweet. He is good at his work and is sufficiently self-aware to understand that his exceptional talent is ultimately self-defeating: he can give pleasure but never receive it. Indeed, the film's major psychological twist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Pinkeye | 2/11/1980 | See Source »

...touched on how the merger would affect students. Some argued women might be better off remaining Radcliffe students, if only officially, because it gave them a sense of identity that affiliation with Harvard would destroy. Constable says he and other faculty members "somewhat feared women would not be as well-off." More faculty seemed concerned that men might be better off if women remained Radcliffe students. Pusey pronounced at the February Faculty meeting that Harvard had an "obligation to the nation" to train Harvard men. Peterson says he felt "very protective about the male student body...

Author: By Susan C. Faludi, | Title: Merger? What Merger? | 11/3/1979 | See Source »

Cuba does not attempt to intervene in countries where only large infusions of aid could produce perceptible change, or relatively well-off countries where local governments are strong enough to resist Communist incursions. Haiti, with a per capita income of only $230 a year, is an example of the former. Explains an exiled opposition leader: "Who would want to inherit Haiti's problems?" Castro's ambitions have also been frustrated on Dominica, where Hurricane David blew away not only thousands of homes, but the odds-on chance that Leftist David Rosie Douglas would unseat Prime Minister Oliver Seraphin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Troubled Waters | 10/22/1979 | See Source »

Though bankers agree that they are nearing the point where additional loans to LDCs could be an unacceptable risk, relatively well-off countries such as Mexico, with its new-found oil riches, and Brazil will continue to find a welcome. Middle-income states such as South Korea, the Philippines and Taiwan will also find lending officers receptive. But the traditional weaklings, such as Dahomey, Upper Volta, Turkey, Zaire, Egypt and others, will face a real struggle trying to get additional loans. Says one White House economist: "For the weaker LDCS the choice will be either lowering their living standard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Threat to Global Growth | 7/2/1979 | See Source »

...feel that instead of helping them, Radcliffe was standing in their way. Because it is an independent corporation, Radcliffe applies separately for federal financial aid programs to support undergraduate women. In 1977-78, Radcliffe bumbled its management of work-study funds, and women in severe financial straits watched relatively well-off Harvard men take the work-study jobs. Radcliffe eventually negotiated a transfer of work-study funds from Harvard to Radcliffe coffers without jeopardizing the school's independent status, supposedly crucial for other grant eligibility. But some undergraduate women knew only that they could not get work study money because...

Author: By Nancy F. Bauer, | Title: Radcliffe: On the Rebound? | 6/7/1979 | See Source »

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