Word: beane
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...state Board of Registration in Medicine concluded after a five-hour emergency meeting that Dr. Margaret H. Bean-Bayog '65 engaged in "substandard care," but it did not suspend her from practicing...
Gill, for one, looks as if he stepped out of an L.L. Bean catalog, and he loves golf so much that he lives on a course outside Nashville. Cleve Francis, one of the few black country singers signed to a major label since Charley Pride in the '60s, is a 46-year-old cardiologist from the suburbs of Washington. Mary-Chapin Carpenter has a degree in American civilization from Brown University; she drew the idea for her highly successful When Halley Came to Jackson, about the appearance of Halley's comet in Mississippi, from a line in the memoirs...
...deregulation hope the result will be competing pipelines that can carry voice, video and digital information into homes, so that consumers will have more choices. More likely -- and probably more economically efficient -- only one company will end up providing the fiber-optic pipeline in each local market. Says Clifford Bean, a telecommunications expert at the consulting firm Arthur D. Little: "The cable industry and the telephone industry are headed toward each other like two steaming locomotives...
...moderated (R) versions -- is not allowed by the motion-picture association. The probable outcome is that like other films embroiled in ratings wrangles, Basic Instinct will be shown fig-leafed in the U.S. but fully frontal abroad and, later, on home video. In that scenario, the bluenoses and bean counters win; consenting adults and ambitious moviemakers lose. And once again a crucial question goes begging: if movies are allowed to make violence terrifying -- as in such acclaimed dramas as The Silence of the Lambs, Cape Fear and JFK -- why can't they make sex sexy...
...convey a sense of gravitas and architectural boogie-woogie. For a company that prides itself on extreme frugality and makes a virtue of simplemindedness, Isozaki's building is happily improbable. After entering via a large red granite cube punched with dozens of not exactly functional windows, the army of bean counters who work there pass through a 120-ft.-tall, open-to-the-sky cylinder -- actually, a vast sundial -- whose floor is covered in loose river stones. Ever been to a cathedral on Venus...