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...walkout has kept supplies lean and prices strong despite a flood of metal from foreign firms and new mini-mills. Without Wheeling's 2.5 million tons of annual output, giants like the U.S. Steel Group of USX have been coming up with their best earnings gains in years. At U.S. Steel, profits nearly doubled in the first quarter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BIZ WATCH Jul 21, 1997 | 7/21/1997 | See Source »

...come and gone. For those of you who were lucky enough to catch "Lawrence of Arabia," either in the '60s or last Wednesday, it's surely an unforgettable experience. More than any other film from Hollywood's so-called Golden Age (with the possible exception of "Ben-Hur"), David Lean's epic deserves to be seen on the big screen. The sweeping expanses of sand and sky, desert cliffs, even the startlingly blue ribbon of the Mediterranean Sea; the small, pencil-thin figure of a lone rider, shimmering in the distance like a mirage; the long convoys of Bedouin warriors...

Author: By Lynn Y. Lee, | Title: Coolidge Corner Offers Boston Large Screen Entertainment | 7/18/1997 | See Source »

...kind of guy who would publicly declare in the midst of an endless shoot with revered, meticulous David Lean that it was "like building the Taj Mahal out of toothpicks." Or sum up his hardworking, half-century career this way: "You don't get to do better; you just get to do more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ETERNALLY COOL: ROBERT MITCHUM (1917-1997) | 7/14/1997 | See Source »

...played out. As the best of his screen characters did. There's a marvelously stunned stoicism in his confrontation with the inner furies that haunt him in Pursued. And when he turned to outright psychopathy with his child-stalking evangelist in The Night of the Hunter, he made you lean forward to catch all the nuances of his menace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ETERNALLY COOL: ROBERT MITCHUM (1917-1997) | 7/14/1997 | See Source »

Gunnison still has a chance, thanks to an unlikely coalition of conservative ranchers and left-leaning environmentalists who have put aside their cultural differences and teamed up to launch a grass-roots campaign to save ranches from the bulldozers. The Gunnison Legacy Project, as the effort is known, is the brainchild of Susan Lohr, a soft-spoken ornithologist from California, and Bill Trampe, a lean, crusty rancher whose family has been in the valley for three generations. The bird watcher and the cowboy, as Lohr and Trampe are sometimes called, hope to save 3,000 acres of ranchland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GUNNISON, COLORADO: COWS OR CONDOS? | 7/7/1997 | See Source »

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