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...while President Clinton's legacy as a complex, fin-de-siecle character seems assured, his status as Kennedyesque trendsetter remains in doubt. His fondness for the mystery novels of Walter Mosley may have briefly nudged the author of Devil in a Blue Dress onto the best-seller lists--but don't bother looking on the current network-TV schedule for any series by famous friend-of-Bill producers Linda Bloodworth-Thomason and Harry Thomason (their most recent show, Woman of the House, was swiftly canceled in 1995). As for setting a sartorial agenda, fashion-industry sources say the President...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CLINTON POP | 11/18/1996 | See Source »

...Lennon, backed by Eric Clapton and Keith Richards, rips into Yer Blues. Yoko, in one of her first rock gigs, wails like an abused hyena. And the Stones play a six-pack of their standards, including a pulverizing Sympathy for the Devil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MUSIC: IT'S MOLDY ROCK 'N' ROLL | 11/4/1996 | See Source »

...TIMON AND PUMBAA (from The Lion King) 66 2 RUGRATS 63 3 BUGS BUNNY 60 4 MICKEY MOUSE 59 5 (tied) MILO (from The Mask) 55 6 (tied) ROAD RUNNER 55 7 TASMANIAN DEVIL 54 8 (tied) CASPER 53 9 (tied) GARFIELD 53 10 (tied) SNOOPY...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook: Nov. 4, 1996 | 11/4/1996 | See Source »

Bill Gates' full name is apparently William Gates III. And as we all know, he goes by Bill. According to the e-mail, if you convert the letters in "Bill Gates III" to their ASCII values and sum them, they equal 666, the biblical mark of the devil. (For those computer illiterates out there, ASCII codes are an international standard which assigns a number from 1-256 to each of the symbols on a standard keyboard...

Author: By David H. Goldbrenner, | Title: HAIL GATES, DARK LORD | 11/2/1996 | See Source »

...play begins not with Punch and Judy quibbling, as one might expect, but rather with the Devil (Charles Levin). He runs down an aisle through the audience to the stage, introduces himself as a troublemaker and marriage-breaker, and announces the topic of the show: marriage and relationships. The scene then shifts to Punch 2 (Benjamin Evett) and Judy 2 (Gail Grate), a modern-day couple with a young daughter, "Judy baby" (Alice Playten). (Part of the show's strangeness comes from the fact that most of the characters' names are some variation on Punch and Judy). They argue...

Author: By Mary-beth A. Muchmore, | Title: A Very Odd 'Punch and Judy' | 10/31/1996 | See Source »

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