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Meanwhile, the old man is doing just fine performing his own work. He plays about 120 dates a year, and in recent years his shows have become stronger than they have been in decades. His set lists change as constantly as the weather, and his live song interpretations often differ radically from their recorded versions. Dylan is wandering around his history, making changes as he sees fit. The veteran folk-rocker says his inspiration comes directly from God. "I've had a God-given sense of destiny," says Dylan. "This is what I was put on earth to do. Just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Legend Of Dylan | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

...mark. I had a similar experience in January, when my heart's plumbing was altered and doctors and nurses looked after me for a week. As Keillor said, a day's work for them, a revelation of human kindness for me. After three days, I was feeling fine and was as flirtatious as any 62-year-old man could be under the same circumstances--that is, until I looked in the mirror the first day they let me wobble to the bathroom and saw a vision of my own grandfather there. Talk about shrinking your libidinous urge! BRUCE GORDON Nanaimo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Sep. 17, 2001 | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

...performs in college. He must be sure to allow himself to develop at his own pace, not to get caught up in other people's hopes for the 2004 Olympics or future world records. From what I've seen of Alan, he will deal with the spotlight just fine. He is level-headed and confident in his God-given abilities and seems ready to build on his early successes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baby Speedster | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

Actually, no, forget that. Anne Wilkes Tucker, curator of photography at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, is nothing like a giant black slab. She's gracious, enthusiastic and cultivated. No slab in our experience has anything like her laugh, which is the musical kind you might expect from a woman born in Baton Rouge, La., one whose taste is stately enough to embrace the 19th century Japanese camera portrait but frisky enough to approve paparazzi shots from the Rome of La Dolce Vita. All the same, she's forceful when she needs to be and cunning when the occasion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Curator: The Exhibitionist | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

Cheryl is not to be confused with Martha. She will not tie ribbons around 300-thread-count linens that someone else irons. (Mendelson says percale is fine and folding will do.) She will never crow over serving eggs laid by her own Araucana hens. Cheryl does not substitute crafts for life, and she has help only once a month or so. In her cozy Manhattan apartment, bikes are parked in the dining room, and the fridge door is a mess of notes, schedules and magnets. "Who can feel at home in a place where the demands for order are exaggerated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Economist: Clean Queen | 9/17/2001 | See Source »

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