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Word: rosee (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Adulation and awards were never a problem. She copped a Grammy as Best New Artist in 1973. Her 1979 LP, The Rose, went platinum. In 1983 she even found a perch on the best-seller lists with her children's book The Saga of Baby Divine. But what, these days, becomes a legend most? The one little item that eluded Bette Midler: movie stardom. Her galvanizing turn in The Rose, as a soulful thrush on the high wire of drugs, sex and rock 'n' roll, earned the actress raves and an Oscar nomination and . . . precisely no film offers. Her next...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bette Midler Steals Hollywood | 3/2/1987 | See Source »

...actress-singer orchestrates her vocal versatility and preternatural empathy to slip inside the spirit of each song. Performing the title tune from The Rose, the lovely mantra of regeneration that has become Bette's Over the Rainbow, she sings in her own haunting alto. But she can go seductively nasal for E Street Shuffle, chicly bonkers for Twisted, brassy and clinging for her evocations of the low-biz Songstresses Vicki Eydie and Dolores DeLago. Midler's most powerful number, Stay with Me (best heard on the sound-track album of her 1980 concert film, Divine Madness), is the plea...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bette Midler Steals Hollywood | 3/2/1987 | See Source »

First Period--1, H, Don Sweeney 4 (C.J. Young, Allen Bourbeau) 5:21; 2, H, Lane MacDonald 27 (Young, Sweeney) 6:01; 3, H, Paul Howley 3 (Peter Chiarelli, Tod Hartje) 9:04, Penalties--C. Jay Rose (interference) 10:32; H. Young (interference...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scoreboard | 2/28/1987 | See Source »

Second Period--4. H. MacDonald 28 (Randy Taylor, Mark Benning) 3:52 Penalties--C. Steve William (cross-checking) 2:46; C. Mike Morrison (hooking) 12:17; C. Rose (slashing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scoreboard | 2/28/1987 | See Source »

That trend, though, seems to have reversed itself: the crime rate rose again in 1985 and early 1986. Blumstein offers this explanation: while there are fewer young males generally, there has been a disproportionate increase of males in the underclass. This group, with all its attendant ills of poverty, alienation and broken homes, is particularly prone to criminal behavior. "What we're seeing," says Blumstein, "is a changing social-class composition, and crime correlates with social class...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Welcome, America, to the Baby Bust | 2/23/1987 | See Source »

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