Word: makeing
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Dates: during 1990-1990
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Lynch's films shout that sentiment in every frame, of course. But listen to him on the subject of aging -- which, as so many things do, attracts and repels him. "Scientists are working right now, while we are having lunch, to give us a better life. I hope they make some big breakthroughs soon. If you could only reconcile the mental with the physical, then throw in the emotional! These growth hormones, where can I get a bunch of them? Is there some way that, with electricity, you could stimulate your own growth hormones? Plug yourself in for five minutes...
Farrell went from dancing virtually every night to ostracism. When she brought matters to a head, she was barred from the theater. She and Mejia danced for four years with Maurice Bejart's company in Brussels before she went back to make peace with Balanchine...
Would that material ever surface? Astonishingly, the answer is yes. Last year TIME received nearly 100 additional hours of Khrushchev tapes with enough material to make a third book, excerpted in this issue and to be published, like the previous two, by Little, Brown, a part of Time Warner Inc. This time Schecter, now an author and a founding editor of a new joint U.S.-weekly newspaper, did the translating and editing, in collaboration with Vyacheslav Luchkov, a scholar and expert on Soviet psychology. The title, Khrushchev Remembers: The Glasnost Tapes, underscores the connection between Khrushchev and Mikhail Gorbachev. Says...
Washington is a city of midlife compromises. Bright-eyed young men and women flock to the capital, as they have since the New Deal, not because they want to make money but because they want to act on their political beliefs. They enter government; they master a specialty; they amass a Rolodex. Then maybe their party loses power or they find themselves lusting after a BMW on a bureaucrat's salary. Suddenly the former idealists are in the private sector, bartering what they learned in government in their new roles as lawyers, lobbyists, public relations consultants...
...what makes the show a unique, and potentially troubling, venture is the politically charged presence of Jackson himself. While asserting that the show will be "fair and balanced," the former Democratic presidential contender does not hide his advocacy goals. The show, he says, will not be "just reflecting and recording and research. We intend to communicate, to act, to make things happen." Says Michael Linder, who is producing the show along with music magnate Quincy Jones: "It's really rethinking what 'issues TV' is. We want to be subjective as well as objective...