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Consider a text by Joyce Carol Oates, her latest novel, called Foxfire, Confessions of a Girl Gang. Oates, a gifted writer with an instinct for the violent and gothic, has invented the story of teenage girls banded together as secret female warriors in the '50s in upstate New York. The narrator, called Maddy-Monkey, describes the '50s: "It was a time of violence against girls and women, but we didn't have the language to talk about it then." Her heroine, Legs Sadovsky, tells the gang, "It's all of them: men. It's a state of undeclared war, them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Men Are They Really That Bad? | 2/14/1994 | See Source »

...Hughes have also driven such luminaries as singer-actress Carol Channing and the late singer-songwriter Harry Chapin. In fact, they plan to wait outside the Hasty Pudding Theatre on February 22 in the hopes of landing Tom Cruise...

Author: By Jeffrey N. Gell, | Title: One Couple Makes Living With Harvard and a Cab | 2/12/1994 | See Source »

Students had some theories as to why the course was so popular. Carol Yeh '96, said, "Its a good core class with cool cultural stuff." Her roommate Yee-San Sun '96 said she was taking the course for "Asian bonding...

Author: By Emilie L. Kao, | Title: 'Ec 10' Caps Top Ten List | 2/11/1994 | See Source »

Nowhere is the turnaround more visible than at the Lyric Opera of Chicago, where Ardis Krainik, a former actress, chorister and secretary turned iron- fisted administrator, is today running one of the country's most successful and innovative mainstream companies. Since 1981, when she succeeded the late Carol Fox as general director of the Lyric, Krainik, 64, has presided over a string of seasons notable not only for their high musical quality, formidable star power and adventurous repertory, but also for their happy balance sheets and sold-out houses. "Rudolf Bing ((the late general manager of the Metropolitan Opera)) once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making Opera Pay, the Chicago Way | 2/7/1994 | See Source »

...than most of the real ones. The host of the show was Lyle Waggoner, and its purpose was to tout a purchasable cure for impotence. Here was celebrity hawking at its historic low: an infomercial for a bogus product endorsed by a TV "star" whose glory days (as The Carol Burnett Show cast member who most resembled George Hamilton) came during the Nixon Administration...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Make Way for the Sellevangelists | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

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