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Whereas other organs can make up for missing enzymes through contact with the blood, the brain is isolated from the bloodstream by a protective sheath of impermeable capillaries: the blood-brain barrier...

Author: By Sheila VERA Flynn, | Title: Fixing the Brain | 4/5/1995 | See Source »

...photographer's teeth had cut the sheath of a tendon, and the doctor told me there were more dangerous bacteria in the mouth of a human than in almost any other animal except a monkey. This didn't surprise me; I had assumed that the mouth of a paparazzo was a cesspool of bacteria...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Horse's Mouth | 9/19/1994 | See Source »

Jackie Kennedy went to Milwaukee when Senator John Kennedy announced for the crucial Wisconsin primary in the winter of 1960, and the temperature was near zero. She sat in a jammed and tacky hotel hall, stiff-backed in a short- sleeved designer sheath with delicate leather gloves up to her elbows, eyes wide and smile frozen. A New York and Washington thoroughbred in the land of < parkas and beer. She never yielded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis: Once, In Camelot | 5/30/1994 | See Source »

Last Sunday, we paid another visit to directress/raconteur Erica Werner in her faux-Titian dorm room. Outside it was cold and dreary, but inside we found Ms. Werner in fine fettle, cooing merrily at her Bonsai tree. Clad in a chain-metal sheath and matching elbow-length gloves, both by Gaultier, with hair by Vidal Sassoon, Ms. Werner discoursed savvily on topic ranging from the Knights Templar to the common cold. As always, we were impressed by her smarts. But we were not where we were--that is, in the presence of genius disguised as high fashion--to engage...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Interview with a Vamp | 2/10/1994 | See Source »

...best sense, a travesty, a masquerade, a cross-dressing comedy of eros. Yet moviegoers do believe in Orlando, in the breadth of its canvas, the immediacy of its emotions, the palliative power of its wit. They can swim in its gorgeous images: the fruit seen below a sheath of ice, the oars dipping into dark water, the fearful maiden rushing between high hedges and across battlefields. They surely believe in Swinton as the pearl and perfection of any gender; her poise and gravity, and the drama of her pale face under a crown of red hair, could mark...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Film of One's Own | 6/7/1993 | See Source »

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