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Bud Cort By Erika Milvy
A quirky black comedy called "Harold and Maude" made him the poster boy of midnight movies. Thirty years later he said,"I've had moments where I wished I'd never done it."
(09/04/99)

Sam the Sham By Steve Burgess
The man who led the Pharaohs out of Memphis with one of the most enduring party classics in rock 'n' roll history was always the real deal. And still is.
(08/21/99)

Cat Stevens By Amy Reiter
By the early '70s he was rich, famous, filling stadiums and partying like the pop star he'd become. But before the decade was over he walked away from it all.
(08/14/99)

Jean-Luc Godard By Charles Taylor
The French New Wave filmmaker directed some of the most exciting, alive films ever made. Forty years later, they're still ahead of their time.
(08/07/99)

Craig Breedlove By Michael Mattis
At age 62, one of the fastest men on Earth is preparing for a leisurely drive across the Nevada desert at, oh ... Mach 1.
(07/31/99)

Lesley Gore By Stephanie Zacharek
Her songs were the ultimate battle cry of teenage brattismo, but they also explored the darker, murkier world of adult feelings.
(07/24/99)

A computer in every hand! By David Pescovitz
Adam Osborne paved the way with the Osborne 1 -- the first portable PC.
(07/17/99)

Connie Chung By Jenn Shreve
America's most bitchin' broadcaster: At the start of this decade, Connie Chung was the hottest item on network news; then several public missteps caused her popularity to fall into the chill zone.
(07/10/99)

Richard Lester By Steve Burgess
The man who "invented" the music video was the perfect film director for the Beatles. His exuberant, manic style matched theirs and brilliantly captured an era at its beginning.
(06/26/99)

Will you still love me tomorrow? By Rachel Louise Snyder
In the '60s and '70s, you couldn't turn on the radio without hearing a Carole King song. Thirty years later,the earth's still moving under her feet.
(06/19/99)

The adventures of King Pong By David Pescovitz
Nolan Bushnell, the quintessential screenager, ported table tennis to the television and launched a revolution in hand-eye coordination.
(06/12/99)

Kate Millett, the ambivalent feminist By Leslie Crawford
The author of the 1970 bestseller "Sexual Politics" may have been the women's movement's most unlikely heroine, or maybe not.
(06/05/99)

The face that launched a thousand trips By Amy Reiter
Long ago and far away, Keir Dullea commanded the spaceship in Kubrick's mind-bending movie that rocketed the sci-fi genre into blockbuster orbit.
(05/29/99)

Love's labors lost By Sean Elder
That Arthur Lee's Love shattered like a bottle only heightens the group's claim to the title of California's greatest psychedelic band.
(05/22/99)

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