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...harpsichord. A Cuban emigre himself, Santeiro has a dead-on eye and ear for people, from the fiercely pretentious grandmother who wants everyone to forget she used to keep pigs to the nosy, noisy maid whose fractured syntax includes the news that an acquaintance is a patient at "Mount Cyanide." In Santeiro's shrewdest insight, the villain is not a religious humbug but a larcenous Lothario masquerading as an embodiment of the work ethic, and the cant he peddles is based on an immigrant assimilationist version of the American Dream...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Once Outposts, Now Landmarks | 6/12/1989 | See Source »

...personal view, the final clubs intoday's world are really outmoded. It will soon bedamaging to someone to put their membership ontheir resume."An aerial view of the Fly Club, one ofHarvard's nine all-male final clubs. The FlyClub--located on Mount Auburn St.--is currentlyunder investigation by the MassachusettsCommission Against Discrimination...

Author: By Rebecca A. Jeschke, | Title: Complications Delay Final Clubs Complaint | 6/8/1989 | See Source »

...ballet dancers, are cute together. Peters' character has a baby, who is cute too, but the kid still has a lot to learn. Everyone plays off stereotypes of stereotypes, so Peters does a send-up of Eastwood's middle-aged machismo, and Eastwood, eyelids fluttering prettily in that fine Mount Rushmore face, takes off Peters' little-girl-lost act. Eastwood wins...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Dippy Harry | 6/5/1989 | See Source »

...below zero, hands and feet are numb, and the air is so thin that a few tentative steps leave the body screaming for relief. Perhaps this is how Hans Meyer felt when, 100 years ago, the German geologist became the first to ascend to the rarefied heights of Mount Kilimanjaro, an immense dormant volcano 49 miles long and 24 miles wide that straddles the border between Tanzania and Kenya. Or the myriad of tourists who have since gasped their way to the roof of Africa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel: Puffing To Hemingway's Peak | 6/5/1989 | See Source »

...best news for the plants is that much of the park's soil seems to have been merely singed. The charred area in some places is only a fraction of an inch deep, leaving root systems intact. Compared with Mount St. Helens, where the 1980 eruption left the side of the mountain without soil, Yellowstone was fortunate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Springtime in The Rockies | 5/29/1989 | See Source »

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