Word: grunwald
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Goldin Jesse F. Goldman Jacob P. Goldstein Samantha A. Goldstein Yael T. Goldstein Paul Goldschmidt Talia R. Gonzalez Siddhartha N. Gowda McComma Grayson Brendan K. Greaves Joseph Green Stephanie B. Greenman Emily F. Gregory Michael K. Grobis Elizabeth S. Grossman Nicholas R.H. Grossman Melissa K. Gruber Jonathan Gruenhut Michael Grunwald Jeffrey R. Gu Lindsey E. Gulden Paul S. Gutman Daniel G. Habib Peter B. Hamel J. David Hampton Elizabeth E. Hancock Julie L. Harms Michael K. Haynie Brenna S. Haysom James L. Hegyi Mark G. Heiman Michael S. Hellerstein Bethany K. Helms J. Welles Henderson Christina S. Henry Stephen...
...with great interest that I read the article on Henry Grunwald's book Twilight, about his battle with macular degeneration [BOOKS, Nov. 15]. Having lost my vision in midlife, I can empathize with Grunwald and understand his daily struggle. I would like others with vision problems to know that reading machines are available that convert the printed pages of books, magazines and newspapers into speech through technology that scans the printed text. This is an absolute blessing and eases the burden of sight loss, affording blind people the opportunity to enjoy topical printed material without additional human assistance. CYNTHIA GROOPMAN...
...Parrillo, Dmitry Sagalovskiy and Derek D. Smith of Mather House; Alice H. Pritikin and Hannah K. Reid Weiss of Pforzheimer House; Baer, Kentaro Fujita, David G. Harris, Matthew P. Humbaugh, Benjamin A. Rahn, Saloni K. Saraiya, and Sam Spital of Quincy House; Browne, Alicia M. DeSantis and Michael R. Grunwald of Winthrop House...
...other 10% of cases are the "wet" form, in which abnormal blood vessels spread across the back of the eye, obscuring vision. Former TIME editor-in-chief Henry Grunwald has evoked the wet form's unrelenting course in his new book Twilight, a piercing reflection on his growing blindness...
Twilight is, at heart, a touching essay on vulnerability. It is the story of a man of action who has always been in command of his world accepting dependence and even folly: as he goes up to a maitre d' to shake his hand, Grunwald is told that he has just greeted a statue of a monkey. The eye, we learn early, is not just a camera but a "portal of light." In that respect, as in many others, this lucid, elegant book is a piercing reflection of (and on) the way that...