Word: maker
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Make absolutely no mistake--the chief economicpolicy maker is President-elect Bill Clinton...Thenumbers [from Clinton's economic plan] add up. Asa staffer, I am there to make sure the numbers arecorrect," Reich said...
...Film-maker Marlon Riggs' and writer Ron Simmons' contribution, entitled "Sexuality, Television and Death: A Black Gay Dialogue on Malcolm X" draws similarly surprising conclusions from Malcolm's ideas. In a subtle discussion, Riggs' and Simmons' pride in Malcolm is tempered by a disappointment in his celebration of a rigid definition of Black manhood. They criticize the ways in which his critique of racism remained rooted in repressive, conventional views on gender and sexuality. They speak of him as both a burden and an inspiration...
From the first moments, when a merchant (voiced, as is the Genie, by Robin Williams) offers to sell the viewer a "combination hookah and coffee maker -- also makes julienne fries," Aladdin is a ravishing thrill ride pulsing at MTV-video tempo. You have to go twice -- and that's a treat, not a chore -- to catch the wit in the decor, the throwaway gags, the edges of the action. Blink, and you'll miss the pile of "discount fertilizer" Aladdin's pursuers land in; or the fire eater with an upset stomach; or half of Williams' convulsing asides. Chuck Jones...
Even mighty IBM has caught the fever. The world's largest computer maker was slow to respond to the rounds of price cutting this summer, and as a result its share of the personal-computer market slipped precipitously. But Big Blue's freshly restructured PC division showed a new nimbleness last week. The day after Compaq's latest price cut, IBM unveiled its long-awaited PS/ ValuePoint series: a line of desktop computers aimed at high-volume corporate buyers and priced to sell for less than comparable Compaq machines -- in one case, exactly $5 less...
...most telling results was that the cancer risk grew in proportion to the strength of the electromagnetic field. Children with constant exposure to the weakest fields, calculated at less than 1 milligauss (about the same that a coffee maker generates when it is brewing), had the lowest incidence of cancer. Those exposed to fields of 2 milligauss showed a threefold increase in their risk, while children exposed to 3 milligauss showed a fourfold increase in the risk of leukemia. Such a clear progression makes it difficult to argue that factors other than exposure to the electromagnetic field were responsible...