Word: parise
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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PARIS: Bowing to boycott threats from American anti-abortion groups, European pharmaceutical giant Hoechst transferred non-U.S. patent rights to the abortion pill RU-486 to one of the doctors who invented it. Although Edouard Sakiz, who headed Roussel Uclaf, the company that lead the development of RU-486...
Well, not quite. The New York production can play for years. So it can stay at the Nederlander with the cast we have. You know, as changes go on over time, but basically the same cast. It can play indefinitely, like Cats, or something like that. It's in a...
Through countless performances, popular recordings and television appearances James Galway has come to be known as one of the most beloved performers in the world. His training is unparalled: he studied at the Royal College of Music, the Paris Conservatoire and with acclaimed flutist Marcel Moyse. His repertoire stretches across...
DIED. JACQUES FOCCART, 83, leading architect of French policy in Africa and adviser to four French Presidents, including Charles de Gaulle; in Paris. An important figure in the Gaullist movement, he operated in clandestine circles to maintain France's power in its former African colonies.
DIED. VICTOR VASARELY, 88, a master of Op Art, a type of abstraction based on optical illusions and displayed in popular paintings that combines bright colors and geometrical forms; in Paris.