Word: makeing
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Dates: during 1990-1990
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...Young is plenty black enough to scare rural whites, as he campaigns in the country towns trying to become the first black Governor elected in the Deep South. His urbane background and contacts, suspect qualities to some black activists, make him even more menacing to poor whites. He is not only "uppity." He is up, while they are still down. As a woman in Baxby, Ga., told a reporter following Young, "I think the coloreds are trying to overpower. That's the way most everyone feels. They're trying to overpower the whites." She is turning against Young the credentials...
When he joined Dr. King's cause, he became the negotiator with white sheriffs and FBI agents. S.C.L.C. veteran Hosea Williams says, "I would go into a town and rile up the blacks and make the whites say, 'What will these crazy niggers do next?' and then in would come nice little Andy saying, 'There are some points we would like to discuss with you.' " When Williams called Young an Uncle Tom, "he jumped on me physically, right in front of Dr. King...
...Make no mistake: not every freshly anointed manager is the second coming of Casey Stengel. In fact, Stengel had only one winning season in the 13 years he piloted a team other than the Yankees. Steinbrenner's Bronx Bumblers still + boast the worst record in baseball, despite new manager Stump Merrill, who says bravely, "I just hope I can survive and stay here." Atlanta managed at least briefly to climb out of last place under Bobby Cox, who swapped the general manager's office for a seat in the dugout. But as Lasorda, in his 15th year as Dodger manager...
While HGH cannot make time stand still, it may help stave off some of the worst effects of aging, including the muscle deterioration that leaves many older people unable to climb stairs or carry groceries. No one yet knows if the larger muscles that HGH stimulates in the elderly will function as younger muscles do. But if that turns out to be the case, at least some of the elderly could get a chance to be more active and productive in their final years...
Molly (Moore) and Sam (Patrick Swayze) are your typical Manhattan duo. They are smart, caring and gorgeous; they live in a fabulous loft. When they make love, to Bobby Hatfield's orgasmic rendition of Unchained Melody, the sex is so beautiful you could die from it. Too soon, Sam does die -- he is murdered -- in a plot twist that anyone can unravel in an eyewink. Now stranded between heaven and earth, he must use the gifts of a sassy psychic (Whoopi Goldberg) to alert Molly of threats to her life -- and, while he has her attention, to make mad pash...