A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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nvent Luther Vandross ' `` Don't You Know That , '' the best moments here are en tertaining despite their seeming conservatism . -0- If all Collective Soul had t o offer on `` Hints Allegations and Things Left Unsaid '' ( Atlantic 82596 ) was `` Shine , '' the band 's debut would be well worth the money . Artfully combin ing the moody drama of post-R.E.M. . Southern rock with the over-amped grit of g runge , `` Shine '' is a pop gem , the sort of single you hear once in the morni ng and end up humming all day . But there 's more to the album than that . `` Lo ve Lifted Me '' shows what the band learned from the Beatles songbook , `` Heave n 's Already Here '' is a pleasant throwback to the singer/songwriter era , and `` Goodnight , Good Guy '' roars in with a powerhouse chorus and an instantly me morable guitar hook . Granted , the rest is mostly filler , but on the whole , i t 's a better beginning than most . Chrissie Hynde is afraid some people might have the wrong idea about her . She 's worried that they might have heard stories about her being a hard-nosed , dom ineering control freak or , worse , taken them as fact . They 're not . The lead er of the Pretenders may be a lot of things feisty , plain-spoken , irreverent , even politically incorrect but a control freak ? Not hardly . `` I don't want t o control my life , I want my life to control me , '' she says , over the phone from the New York offices of her record company . `` I 've always believed that if I allow my life to control me , then I can experience a great deal more than if I think that I 'm on top of it and I set my own agenda from year to year . '' That agenda doesn't always have to do with the usual rock 'n' roll priorities , either . At the moment , Hynde is in full road-mode , happily promoting her ban d 's new album and eager to start playing gigs again . But `` Last of the Indepe ndents '' is only the Pretenders ' second new album since 1987 , while this curr ent outing marks the band 's first tour in eight years . `` I 've had other thin gs to do for that eight years , '' she says , a mite defensively . `` It hasn't even been an option . '' She doesn't elaborate at least not right away . But as the conversation ambles on , she eventually admits that her chief priority for m uch of that time was to stay home and be a good mother to her two daughters . `` The last time I was on tour , I had two infants in baskets , '' she says . `` T here was the coach with the band , and then there was the coach with me and the kids . I can't sleep in a coach , over night , but the kids could . So that woul d mean that by 8 o' clock in the morning , I 'd already be totally irritable , j arred , jangled from driving and having done a show and not sleeping . And then Mary Poppins would come on . You know ? Not my idea of a rock tour . '' So Hynde just `` chilled out altogether , and attended to my first consideration , which was looking after my children . But now I 'm freed up . I can kind of do it a l ittle bit . So I 'm delighted . `` I mean , I adore my children above all else . Of course I do . But I 've got to rock . '' She pauses a second , and then adds , ominously , `` But ( the children ) have nothing to do with it . You willn't see them or hear from them . Nobody gets to meet them . Nobody has to know their name and who they are . And if anyone tries to .. . ' ' Hynde stops , trying to think up an appropriate threat . `` Well , I suggest just don't . '' Advice tak en . Hynde admits that it 's a ticklish situation for her to be in . `` It 's a package , '' she says . `` They come with me , in many ways . But they 're , you know .. . ' ' Of course , nobody ever said being a rock 'n' roll grown-up would be easy . There are times , Hynde says , when she worries that others might fin d her enthusiasm for the music a tad unseemly for someone her age . But she 's c ertainly not going to let that stop her . `` I 'm in my 40s , and I love it more than ever , '' she enthuses . `` So I will enjoy it . I 'll still go out and bu y pop papers . No one can stop me , it 's not illegal . If I want to say I love Urge Overkill and everyone turns around and says , ` Well , you 're retarded , ' fine . So be it . Allow me to be a rock 'n' roll retard for the rest of my life . `` Bear in mind that , after all , I am just a girl from Akron , Ohio . Like , I 'm nobody . And I can now stay in hotels in New York and stuff ? '' She laug hs , clearly delighted . `` I mean , my friends in Akron can't go and stay in a hotel in New York and just hang out and do the things that I do . They have to l ike , get to work in the morning and stuff . I caught the gold ring , man . '' ( Optional add end ) That 's one reason she doesn't mind many of the impositions that come with rock stardom . `` When I 'm asked to sign autographs and people s ay , ` isn't that a pain ? ' I say , ` No . ' When I write my name down on that piece of paper , I 'm signing a contract in my own mind that says , ` You do not have to go to work tomorrow . Sign here . ' `` I love this stuff , '' she conti nues . `` And I 've learned the art of pulling back and getting out of it as soo n as it starts seeming a little bit monotonous , as soon as it starts feeling li ke a career . I don't want to make it sound that I 'm so superficial that I can say that it 's all just good fun , don't take it seriously , because I 've never met a musician who doesn't take it very seriously . `` But it is entertainment , after all . And I 've decided that if I 'm going to be in entertainment , then I want to be entertained , too . '' Back when the Beastie Boys first bum-rushed the popular consciousness , their d etractors wanted to write them off as loudmouths with a lot of attitude but litt le real talent . Most figured the trio would be forgotten as soon as `` Fight fo r Your Right ( To Party ) '' fell off the charts . Guess again . Eight years lat er , the Beasties remain a force to be reckoned with , having expanded their hor izons to include everything from a genre-jumping live show to a burgeoning media empire . Start with the musical end . Although a growing number of rap acts now work with a live band , the Beasties are among the few that actually are a band , an approach the Beasties used heavily on the 1992 album `` Check Your Head . '' `` When we made ` Check Your Head , ' we were just coming off having not play ed our instruments for a while , '' explains bassist Adam `` MCA '' Yauch , over the phone from a tour stop in Toronto . `` So it was all real new . But after w e toured a lot , we got a lot more comfortable playing together as a band , with our percussion player and our keyboard player and everything . Things started j elling a little bit more . `` So when we went back into the studio to record the new album , it came a lot more naturally . It just happens a little easier when you 're playing together more . '' That album , `` Ill Communication '' ( which arrives in stores Tuesday ) , doesn't just benefit from a tighter band ; it als o boasts the sort of stylistic prowess that allows the Beasties to move easily f rom rock to punk to old-school funk . Making music isn't the only thing the Beas ties do these days , however . Among other things , the trio has launched its ow n magazine , Grand Royal . Although much of its content is music-oriented , the magazine is hardly as narrowly focused as mainstream periodicals , such as Spin or Vibe , as stories on George Clinton and the Pharcyde sit cheek by jowl with i tems on Bruce Lee , Joey Buttafuoco and Kiss . ( Optional add end ) `` I 'm surp rised at how homogenized mainstream press is , '' says Yauch . `` It 's really d irected at this one , watered-down thing that they think everyone 's interested in . I think that you need a little bit more of a personal touch on a lot of the stuff that 's going out these days . '' Part of that personal touch for Yauch i s coverage of the political and cultural situation in Tibet . `` My personal fee ling about it is that their approach to life and their way of understanding real ity is well in advance of most Western understanding , '' he says . `` And one o f the main reasons I think it 's such an important issue is ' cause , if we don' t get our approach to technology in check pretty soon , we 're going to destroy the planet . I see Westerners as really immature , with a lot of dangerous toys . If we don't get our minds and thinking in check , we 'll basically blow up the planet . `` So it seems like a good time to turn to the Tibetans . '' It was a decade ago , in the early days of America 's love affair with the mini van , that General Motors launched the Astro to compete against Chrysler Corp. ' s then nearly new Voyager and Caravan . Like the Ford Aerostar that arrived abou t the same time , the Astro is bigger than the Chrysler but never was serious co mpetition for it . The success of the Chryslers , you see , was based not just o n their ability to carry everything including the kitchen sink , but to do that and still ride comfortably and handle well enough to please people who don't muc h like driving trucks . The extended Astro , which is about 10 inches longer tha n the standard version , can carry about 20 cubic feet more stuff than the stand ard Astro , and 30 cubic feet more stuff than a stretched Chrysler , assuming al l three vehicles have their second and third rows of seating removed . An Astro can tow a 5,500-pound trailer , 2,000 pounds heavier than any Chrysler will pull . So the Astro and nearly identical GMC Safari offer impressive advantages for a very reasonable price ; our tester , packed with comfort and convenience optio ns , listed for $ 24,289 , with freight . The price one pays , unfortunately , f or the Astro 's more trucklike capabilities is a jouncier ride and clumsier hand ling than is provided by the Chryslers or GM 's own Lumina/TransSport/Silhouette line , for that matter despite chassis refinements for '94 . Although we 'd rat e the handling superior to that of any full-sized van , there 's more sway in co rnering , more body shake and more rear axle hop on bumps than in the smaller mi nivans adding up to a sense of being less in control than you 'd like when traff ic and road conditions are challenging . Back on the plus side , the all-wheel d rive , costing $ 2,300 , is a modern , full-time system . No complaints about th e engine , either ; even with a four-passenger load , hundreds of pounds of carg o , and the air conditioner going , it did an impressive job of maintaining spee d on long interstate upgrades and of keeping itself cool . The automatic transmi ssion works smoothly . Our tester 's four , extra-cost bucket seats proved comfo rtable even after several hours of driving . Controls and displays are well-desi gned , although sun glare sometimes makes the gauges difficult to read . Our tes ter 's `` dutch door '' tailgate , also at extra cost , is handy for loading in close quarters . The window hinges up , then the rest of the gate opens to the l eft and right in two sections . Standard-length Astros with rear-wheel drive beg in at about $ 17,000 with a 165-horsepower V-6 . Distributed by the Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service . Nissan makes au fait sedans for younger families and naughtier coupes for the h igher spirited who take their driving seriously . Bouncing between both demands , capable of romping or simply strolling through life , has been Nissan 's Maxim a . Visually .. . it 's a four-door sedan . Physically .. . it 's a high-ceiling ed sports car with a performance legacy that began in 1980 with an engine borrow ed from the 240Z sports car . Realistically .. . well , more than 90 percent of Nissan 's car sales are of socially acceptable sedans : Altima , Maxima and Sent ra . The company 's sporty coupes , the 240SX and the 300ZX , remain toys for a gymnastic minority . And as the high energies and fine handling of 130-mph four- doors such as Toyota Camry , Ford Taurus , Honda Accord and Chrysler 's first fa mily of LH cars become silky norms , the demand for sedans that snarl is no more . So the 1995 Maxima was built to paddle steadily toward the mainstream of mid- size . The legacy of every car in the new Maxima lineup remains hearty handling and V-6 athleticism . But they move with a quieter step while handling the irrit ations of traffic and road surfaces with higher sophistication . There 's even a maxi Maxima , all wood-trimmed elegance , lustered upper crust and puffy-leathe r softness very suggestive of Infiniti luxury . It takes , however , more than b etter mechanicals and Ritz-Carlton interiors to buck the best of today 's market . So Maxima , depending on the model , is priced between $ 700 and $ 2,500 lowe r than last year . More significant of the tussle ahead , they cost $ 900 to $ 2 ,000 less than the intended target : the V-6 Toyota Camry . Honda 's Accord stil l has the edge on price but even 1995 versions do not offer a V-6 engine . Ford Taurus underprices Maxima but its V-6 is skinnier by 50 horsepower . From two tr im levels of last year , Maxima has advanced to three with the addition being th at kinder , gentler , plushier sedan with a price tickling the velvet tootsies o f Mercedes C-Class . From a choice of two V-6s , Maxima has mellowed its power s ource to one lighter , more compact , double cam , 3.0-liter engine . It still p roduces 190 horsepower but runs cleaner , more economically and produces heftier torque . If bargain basements are your lifestyle , the Maxima GXE with manual t ransmission is your car and costs $ 19,999 . Those nines , of course , fool no o ne because base prices conveniently exclude unavoidable taxes , registration and destination charges . So get real and figure on more than $ 21,000 with an addi tional $ 999 or $ 1,000 to be on the safe side for a four-speed automatic . Ampl e goodies are standard on the GXE and include dual air bags , air conditioning , cruise control , power windows and steering , rear window defroster , cut pile carpets , dual mirrors and courtesy lighting from trunk to ashtray . Next in lin e at $ 20,999 or $ 22,000 with all the hidden bits is the manual-transmission Ma xima SE . This is a chariot for the warmer of blood who understand the real bene fits of stiffened shocks , firmer struts and stickier tires . Also for those who believe that a leather-wrapped steering wheel , body-colored door handles , rea r-deck spoiler , polished wheels and driving gloves are synonymous with speedy p rogress . Then there 's the Maxima GLE , our test car , which , if not the lap o f lady luxury , certainly lounges at her feet . The sticker of $ 24,199 c' mon , work out the true price among yourselves includes needless , therefore desirabl e , luxuries that are native customs on European cars . Such as leather seats , bun warmers , heated mirrors and a Bose compact disc sound system that will rupt ure eardrums two cars over . There is key-less entry , a thinking climate contro l , an automatic security system and other programs aimed at one day rendering t he human touch obsolete . Anti-lock brakes are a $ 995 option throughout the lin e . Strangely , Maxima styling , sketched by Nissan Design International in San Diego , is a flop . Head-on , the three-lip grille with blacked-out mesh is a da rk smirk from Morticia Addams . The car stands a little high , almost perching . The rear shrieks of Toyota Corolla . Heads do not turn at Maxima 's passage sim ply because in silhouette it makes only one positive statement : This is just an other Japanese car . The GLE 's interior has much more to say and , again , Infi niti is the language being spoken . Leather-faced seats are soft quality with a magnificent , eight-way driver 's chair that would adjust to Gumby . Walnut trim on the dashboard , center console and arm rests is deep and rich , albeit fake . And the switch gear works in deep whispers , not harsh clicks . These are comf ortable , friendly accommodations with understated touches to prevent luxury fro m becoming intimidating . Spaciousness , as Casey Stengel might have allowed , i s everywhere . Thanks to a longer wheelbase and compact suspension , cabin heigh t has been improved until front-seat occupants no longer need open the sun roof for additional headroom . There 's more leg , knee and shoulder space in the bac k seats . But a hand brake set to the right of the driver 's seat and barely thr ee inches from the face of the console is an exercise in clumsiness . It needs r elocating , at least shortening to keep from rasping and gouging a driver 's kne e . Alarm and central locking controls including remote-control opening of front windows to release solar-basted summer air work flawlessly . Also silently . A clearly audible chirp or kerchunk would be a better way of advising a departing owner that the Maxima is armed and secure . Performance remains Maxima 's might . It is not improved radically but has certainly been burnished carefully into a smoother , tighter , less strenuous package . Engine : 4.3-liter V-6 , 200 horsepower . Transmission : Four-speed automatic , all-wheel drive . Safety : Driver air bag , four-wheel antilock brakes . Weight : 4,241 pounds . Maximum Cargo Room : 170.4 cubic feet ( with second and third seats removed ) . Base Price : $ 19,701 , including destination charge . EPA Mil eage : 15 mpg city , 19 mpg highway . Cost : As tested , $ 26,633 ( includes automatic transmission , anti-lock brake s , two air bags , automatic climate control , cruise control , central locking and alarm , Bose compact disc sound system , sun roof , leather-faced seats and faux walnut trim . ) Engine : 3.0-liter , 24-valve , V-6 developing 190 horsepow er . Type : Front-engine , front-drive , sports sedan . Performance : 0-60 mph , with four-speed automatic , 9.2 seconds . Top speed , estimated , 130 mph . Fue l consumption , EPA city and highway , 21 and 28 mpg . Curb Weight : 3,097 pound s .
WASHINGTON A Washington Post article may have left the impression that Federal Communications Commission Chairman Reed Hundt chose the 7:30 a.m. time for a spe ech he delivered at a conference of the National Cable Television Association . It was the association that scheduled him for that time . LOS ANGELES Like surfers waiting for the next wave , booksellers are an anxious bunch these days . They know a big one is coming , they just don't know where o r when . From coast to coast , the book biz is abuzz with talk of a brave new co mputerized world . In the future , some experts predict , a tsunami-force wave o f CD-ROM technology and other innovations will wash through U.S. bookstores , dr amatically transforming the way texts are written , packaged , sold and read . W ithin years , they suggest , books will be more than hard-bound bestsellers or m ass-market paperbacks . They 'll be three-dimensional , sensory experiences on h ome computer screens that usher in a new era of literary information . You 'll j ust pop in a compact disk , turn on the laptop .. . and read . Few are predictin g the demise of books as we know them , because it 's hard to imagine your Power Book at the beach , or bedtime stories with the kids in front of an impersonal c omputer . But in a nation where 32 percent of all homes have PCs , the demand fo r electronic book products could become insatiable . `` There 's a change coming and we have to stake our claim to this new market , '' says Doug Dutton , owner of a Dutton 's Books in Los Angeles . `` Yet that 's all we know . We bookselle rs have a lot of questions about where we 're headed . '' They 'll be seeking an swers starting Saturday , when more than 30,000 publishers , authors , bookselle rs , agents and other vendors gather in Los Angeles for the annual American Book sellers Association convention . The four-day event is the largest book conferen ce in the English-speaking world . Much of the informal buzz is expected to focu s on electronic publishing , a relatively new branch of the book business that ' s gathering more force each year . For the first time , the ABA will be devoting a sizable chunk of convention floor space to computer book products . The marke t has clearly grabbed sellers ' attention but will they be able to ride the new wave ? `` That 's the $ 64,000 question , '' says Elisa Zachary , publisher of S imon & Schuster 's interactive division , which is less than a year old . `` You have to train people to sell these products , and consumers have to become more aware . Maybe they 've heard about electronic books . But they don't know much more . '' On the surface , it looks simple : CD-ROM technology records the text of a book on compact disk to be read on a computer screen . The experience is of ten enhanced with sound , graphics and material not found in the original book . The most dramatic feature of the new product , however , is interactive : It en ables people to `` talk back '' to the text with the mere click of a computer sw itch . From a creative standpoint , the possibilities are endless . In a future CD-ROM book , for example , readers could step into a novel , invent characters and change plots . The technology already exists for kids to watch Velociraptors crossing a Mongolian plain , as they click their way through a book about dinos aurs . History has been enhanced for many college students , who now can look up Hitler , Lenin or Stalin in an on-line encyclopedia and see grainy films of the m delivering speeches on home computer screens . Publishers are calling it the u ltimate marriage of reading and entertainment . But they caution that electronic books and their ilk are like many other futuristic products rolling down the ne w information superhighway . `` Right now it 's all talk and speculation , '' sa Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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