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...Screed; the Weekly Standard b) Wart; Martha Stewart Living c) Celebrity Skin; Celebrity Skin d) Slate; Slate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook: Sep. 21, 1998 | 9/21/1998 | See Source »

...Burns, the filmmakers have commissioned a clay model of the comic's head, accurate down to "every blemish, wart and liver spot," as Greenberg puts it. The head will then be scanned into a computer and brought to life with what is known as motion-capture technology, using data from sensors that have been attached to an actor--in this case the old impressionist Frank Gorshin, who will give Burns' performance. No doubt this production will be watched closely by the effects industry, as well as by Rich Little's agent. Greenberg is promising pretty grand results: "Someone with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HAVE GIGABYTES, WILL ACT | 9/1/1997 | See Source »

...doctor, she waits alongside the likes of Chen and feels no less worthy of her doctor's attention just because she is on welfare and has no private insurance. "I chose him because he was so nice to me when I went into the clinic to get a wart on my finger looked at," Broyles explains. "He treats us all the same. Even if I am on Mercy Care [a provider sponsored by the Roman Catholic Church], he doesn't look at me funny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A TALE OF TWO STATES | 12/18/1995 | See Source »

...Cummings), who says little but is happy to chew voraciously on his own leg. The hero's helpers, who save Simba in the desert and teach him their live-for-today philosophy, Hakuna matata -- Swahili for "What, me worry?" -- are Timon (Nathan Lane), a streetwitty meerkat, and the lumbering wart-hog Pumbaa (Ernie Sabella). They chew beetles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: The Mouse Roars | 6/20/1994 | See Source »

Marianne Zaslavsky, 9, of Needham is a science museum connoisseur, and prefers the Museum of Comparative Zoology to the Boston Science Museum because of the sheer number of animals on display. "I love birds," she said. "Mom, look at this guy. He looks like he has a wart." Twelve-year-old Michael Horton likes trilobites. "It's neat to see fossils and the stones they were fossilized in and their texture," he said...

Author: By Deborah Wexler, VISITING THE MUSEUMS | Title: Lions and Tigers and Trilobites, Oh My! | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

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