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...John Galliano have 'fessed up to her influence. And at the European fall 2004 shows in Paris in March, designers like Marc Jacobs at Louis Vuitton referenced Westwood with platform shoes, tartan kilts and velvet details. This Thursday the Westwood homage will be official when London's Victoria & Albert Museum honors the designer with a sweeping retrospective of her work. The 15-week exhibit, the largest the V&A has ever devoted to a British designer, features more than 150 of Westwood's designs, including clothing she created for the Sex Pistols in the 1970s and a 1996 ball gown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Saluting Fashion's Bad Girl | 3/28/2004 | See Source »

...team made their ground-breaking discovery with a little luck and a giant telescope. Starting with a theory first postulated by Albert Einstein and then ignored for the last hundred years, they eventually concluded that a mere five percent of the universe’s matter is composed of the kind of atoms we know and love. The rest, they found, is an amorphous unknown they termed “dark energy.” This was the kind of discovery that raised questions rather than answering them...

Author: By Meghan M. Dolan, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Pen and Paper Revolutionaries: Copernicus In the People's House | 3/18/2004 | See Source »

...journal’s first issue featured an article written by Albert Einstein, and the magazine continually attracted famous thinkers such as W.E.B DuBois, Malcolm X and C. Wright Mills...

Author: By Andrew B. English, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Marxist Thinker, Former Prof. Dies | 3/5/2004 | See Source »

...ALBERT BELLE SALARY: $10 MILLION 1997 Chicago White Sox The Sox dumped others to trim the payroll and finished under...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Top-Salary Curse | 3/1/2004 | See Source »

Those closest to the gears of the global economy were the first to notice the coming storm in China. Albert Stahl, a London ship broker, watched the spot-market price for cargo-vessel leases rise last winter to $22,000 a day for a ship big enough to transport iron ore. He assumed the spike was due to the impending Iraq war. But through the summer the price kept increasing; shipowners even stopped giving quotes in expectation that prices would jump again the following day. Then Stahl began hearing reports of vessels the size of three football fields anchored...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China: TIME Global Business: Moving Too Fast? | 2/23/2004 | See Source »

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