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...Jack Cooper Trondheim, Norway...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forum, Sep. 2, 1974 | 9/2/1974 | See Source »

...Beatles weren't a passing fancy that would go away. As new groups tried to sell acid rock and noise, The Beatles became, well, acceptable. "They weren't greasy like the motorcycle bunch of the '50 s," says one fan, "and they weren't slick like Bowie or Alice Cooper are now. The Beatles were nice--you could've brought one home to your parents." Today, orchestrations of "Yesterday" and "Eleanor Rigby" are pumped into supermarkets. One girl even caught her "mother bopping around to Beatle songs...

Author: By Michiko Kakutani, | Title: Nostalgia for the Pepsi Generation | 8/13/1974 | See Source »

...standees. Across the country, magic is enjoying unprecedented fortune. Says Dai Vernon, 80-year-old dean of American magic: "I've been conjuring for six decades; I don't know when the field has been so fertile." James Randi, a prestidigitator who tours with the Alice Cooper show, agrees: "Magic has had red-letter days. But this is a red-letter year." The prediction is no illusion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The Magic Boom: New Sorcery | 7/22/1974 | See Source »

Jebriath is, one of our correspondents tells us, "just like David Bowie, only more so." He's at the Performance Center until Sunday, and is being touted all over the place as a great act. Don't believe it. He's cashing in on the Bowe-Alice Cooper craze and has a very elaborate style with lots of props and strange sexuality but musically he's all show and no go. If you don't believe us listen to his new single, "Scumbag," and decide for yourself. Stay home and watch Highway Patrol instead of Jebriath...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUSIC | 7/19/1974 | See Source »

Richard N. Cooper, 40. On the eve of Henry Kissinger's appointment as National Security Affairs adviser to President Nixon in 1969, he turned to Cooper for a crash course in international economics. A Yale professor, Cooper served as a senior staff economist for President Kennedy's Council of Economic Advisers and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for International Monetary Affairs under Lyndon Johnson. The author of The Economics of Interdependence, he has a suitably international background: born in Seattle, he grew up in Germany, was educated at Oberlin, the London School of Economics and Harvard. Named Yale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: 200 Faces for the Future | 7/15/1974 | See Source »

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