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...exterior was ripped away in favor of a charmless white marble skin in the mid- 1960s. The dowager has been turned into a cheap mummy, yet the disposition of Times Tower remains an architectural cause celebre. Johnson and Burgee once proposed that the building be stripped down to its steel skeleton, gaily painted and lighted -- a wry Piranesian folly absolutely perfect for the spot. What seems more likely, alas, is that the building will be demolished and replaced by a conventionally highfalutin plaza, monumental and mute...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Renewal, But a Loss Of Funk | 2/29/1988 | See Source »

...vote delighted members of the Liberal Party, which approved the merger three weeks ago. Liberal Party Leader David Steel said the wide margin of approval "means that both parties can go forward together not just with confidence but with enthusiasm." Robert Maclennan, who succeeded Owen as head of the Social Democrats, declared that the newly formed party "has a great opportunity to take British politics out of the straitjacket of Conservative dominance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain Family Feud | 2/15/1988 | See Source »

...honesty, levity aside, the Quad Ice Project is well worth a visit. While the steel poles and wire mesh may not be to everyone's liking, the ice itself is of truly breathtaking beauty. Michael Van Valkenburgh has created an environment in which it is impossible to ignore what is so easily ignored: the very essence of the beauty that is winter...

Author: By Ellen J. Harvey, | Title: Ice Dream | 2/6/1988 | See Source »

Executives at General Motors are deeply concerned about a rising cost of doing business. Escalating wage demands perhaps, or increasing prices for steel? No, the problem has nothing to do with making cars. What really alarms GM is the company's health insurance plan. During the first nine months of last year, GM spent more than $2 billion on medical care coverage for its 2.3 million employees and retirees and their dependents. In the same period, the profits earned by the giant industrial firm were $2.7 billion. And while those earnings were only marginally higher than they had been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Critical Condition | 2/1/1988 | See Source »

...region's conventional exports suffer a reputation for second-rate quality: outdated electronic calculators, low-grade steel, shoddy carpeting. But the East bloc's human exports are often top of the line. Many of the most talented performers have been trained from as young as age six at rigorous state-run sports or music institutions. Other stars, circus artists among them, possess skills that are centuries-old specialties of Eastern Europe. Yet Communist governments are so hungry for hard currency to help finance growing debts to Western lenders and pay for imported products that they routinely mark down the price...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tales of The Flesh Trade | 2/1/1988 | See Source »

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