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...also seems unnecessary--because Sellon has little to apologize for when it comes to the musical part of the show. Sellon is a fine lyricist and many of his songs contain nice twists and subtle turns of phrase. Even better is Frederick O. Freyer's music, which is the finest part of the show Freyer has managed to pull off a 40s sound which is not simply copied. You might hear a little Basic one in a while, and some of the harmonies might remind you a bit of some of the classics from that period--but Freyer uses these...

Author: By Thomas Hines, | Title: Armies of the Night | 4/24/1981 | See Source »

...pulse hardly climbed above 85 beats a minute; this was, after all, Young's fifth such journey, the most by any American astronaut. Allowed Young: "It shook a little sharper. The vibration was more than what we experienced in the simulator." But the rookie Crippen could barely contain his excitement-his pulse raced to 135-or find the right words to express his emotions. Looking out of Columbia's windows, he said jubilantly, "John's been telling me about it for three years, but ain't no way you can describe it. It's hard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Man, What a Feeling! What a View! | 4/20/1981 | See Source »

...exudes "the feeling of a sort of car battery," in the words of its designer. But instead of battery acid, the $5.9-million extension of the Fogg Art Museum--plans for which were unveiled this week--will contain galleries and offices for the Fogg's departments of Ancient, Oriental, and Near Eastern art. The brick structure, to be built on the site now occupied by Allston Burr Hall, will also house a 300-seat lecture hall in its basement. "It's incredibly dense--sometimes while working on it, I've had the feeling it's going to sink into...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Meanwhile . . . | 4/18/1981 | See Source »

Western democracies have for years been attempting to contain budgets dominated by social welfare outlays. Nonetheless, spending generally continues to rise at a pace faster than the growth in revenues. Governments politically pressed by inflation, are struggling to overcome special interest pressures with little visible success. The travail of Britain's Margaret Thatcher is the most publicized recent example. But in the past few weeks, President Reagan may have, partly by calculation and partly by happenstance, found the key to defusing special interest pressures and reining in spending The presumption that spending could be cut by close...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Secret to Budget Cuts | 4/13/1981 | See Source »

...spring flood of corporate annual reports is now flowing into mailboxes of America's 29.8 million shareholders. Along with the pretty pictures, fancy graphs and carefully chiseled words, many contain the most significant change in accounting procedures in decades. They reflect the effects of inflation on a company's financial performance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: By the Numbers | 4/13/1981 | See Source »

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