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Worse, when action is never shown to have deadly or pitiable consequences, it tends toward abstraction. Pretty soon you're not tornado watching, you're special-effects watching. These are, to be sure, excellent, a seamless blend of digital wizardry and mechanical stunts supervised by the masterful John Frazier. Excellent too is Jack N. Green's cinematography, stubbornly trying to supply the moods and textures missing from the script. In the end, though, Twister proves what everyone already knows--that great visual effects alone cannot carry a picture to anything but insane profitability. And that Michael Crichton has never...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOX-OFFICE BLOWHARD | 5/20/1996 | See Source »

...deeply saddened by this news. I know both of them planned to attend medical school, and Chinua received a fellowship for a one-year public service project doing HIV/AIDS prevention education and program development. I greatly appreciated each of them during the time we worked together," said Linda J. Frazier, UHS health education coordinator and AEO supervisor

Author: By Sarah E. Scrogin, | Title: Two 1993 Grads Die in Suspected Murder-Suicide | 1/19/1996 | See Source »

...guest-edit an issue of the New Yorker? Editor Tina Brown's decision to ask the vernacular star to mix it up with the venerable magazine's staff for an issue on the American woman was a cocktail some writers found hard to swallow. Longtime New Yorker writer Ian Frazier faxed in his resignation. "It's a theological issue," says Frazier, meaning not that Roseanne is God but that writing is spiritual. "The New Yorker is about writing. Is writing sitting in a room pitching ideas to some tyrannical TV star?" Other alarmed writers were soothed by assurances that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Sep. 18, 1995 | 9/18/1995 | See Source »

...Family by Ian Frazier (Farrar, Straus & Giroux). The author, first visible as a New Yorker humorist, then as an observer in Great Plains, an elegiac portrait of the American heartland, turns reflective and inward in this long, moody rummage in time's attic. He began to gather material about his near and distant family after the death of his parents, searching, he says, for the meaning of life, for "a meaning that would defeat death." The journey -- perhaps more correctly his obsession -- began in 1987. Collecting family papers, dating as far back as 1855, he filed them in two boxes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Best Books of 1994 | 12/26/1994 | See Source »

AIDS "impacts the campus in many different ways. This is an issue that affects all of us," said Linda J. Frazier, a registered nurse who supervises AIDS education at the University Health Services Office of Health Education...

Author: By Valerie J. Macmillan, | Title: AIDS Week Promotes Awareness | 11/29/1994 | See Source »

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