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Word: classics (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...about the evils of ambition. Three "weird sisters" prophesy to Macbeth (Mark Southern), a Scottish nobleman, that he will one day become king of Scotland. At the urging of Lady Macbeth (Alicia Rubin), the hero decides to help fate along by knocking off the current sovereign, leading to the classic meditation on paranoia, guilt, death and despair. The critical decision for the contemporary director is whether to present these and other traditional themes as best she can or to innovate, to impose new contexts and outline new meanings...

Author: By Jefferson S. Chase, | Title: Saucy Doubts and Fears on the Mainstage | 11/21/1986 | See Source »

...condition was first identified in 1906, when German Physician Alois Alzheimer autopsied the brain of a woman with classic senile dementia. Because the woman was middle-aged, however, and because senility was considered a natural consequence of aging, Alzheimer's disease went unrecognized among the elderly until the 1960s. Today it is believed that Alzheimer's affects 5% to 10% of people over the age of 65, including half of all nursing- home residents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: A Test for Alzheimer's? | 11/17/1986 | See Source »

...prices of prerecorded cassettes. Movie studios have drastically lowered prices < in the hope that consumers will purchase tapes rather than rent them. According to the Fairfield Group, a market-research firm, the average price of a prerecorded cassette has fallen from $51.60 in 1984 to $27 this year. Many classic movies now sell for only $19.95, and children's films often go for $14.95. This has prompted many mass merchandisers, notably Sears, to start selling cassettes in their stores. Mom-and-pop shops, which started out in rentals only, have been slow to adapt to the trend. One reason...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clash of the Video Merchants | 11/17/1986 | See Source »

...laughs, American Werewolf displays a classic Landis weakness. Almost every one of the film's creative elements, from characters to special effects, shows a degree of thought and attention to detail most youth comedies do without. Yet all the effort--clever dialogue, gruesome special effects, expertly choreographed car crashes--exists to propel an idea that is, well, dumb. Landis made a werewolf movie that is nothing more than a werewolf movie; a pity, because it could have conveyed more profound sentiments than "Yikes!" Landis said he got the idea in 1969, when while traveling through Yugoslavia, he saw a ritual...

Author: By Jess M. Bavin, | Title: Without Rules | 11/14/1986 | See Source »

...half of an outfit with heavier fabrics like cashmere or gabardine, then use an airy silk or supple jersey to soften up things below. "My clothes are not of the moment," Ozbek says, speaking in his hurried, lightly accented English. "Take all the accessories away, and they are classical. But can I say modern classic? You can wear them a season past, mix them up with other pieces." Indeed, a bit of Ozbek swank like a long black, clingy dress with a fuchsia moire top that relocates the neckline several miles south would look great at a dance club...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Color of New Blood | 11/10/1986 | See Source »

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