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...learn and grow-in,” and a de facto mantra, “We emphasize ‘camp’ for emphasis,” Camp Chunder Camp has proven to be more than fodder for summer postcards printed in Cambridge’s only breakfast-table daily...

Author: By Matthew A. Busch, | Title: Bucolic Bacchanalia | 7/1/2005 | See Source »

Buying an apple can be a revolutionary act. Don't believe it? Read The Real Food Revival: Aisle by Aisle, Morsel by Morsel, a new book by Sherri Brooks Vinton and Ann Clark Espuelas (Tarcher/Penguin). Galley Girl had breakfast with Vinton, 37, at a swank midtown Manhattan restaurant and chewed the (non-trans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Galley Girl: What's Cookin'? | 6/29/2005 | See Source »

...blackberry bushes, and as dormant as the volcanoes found in this Auvergne region of central France. Today, it's a different story. The village has come back to life, thanks to a sympathetic outsider who decided to build a hotel there. The property is neither a typical bed-and-breakfast nor a trendy health farm. Instead, it consists of 14 houses, which comprise the hotel's rooms and suites. The 9th century château is where you'll find the reception desk. And the beautiful cobbled streets are the hotel corridors. Guests live alongside a handful of the village...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: "Ou Est l'Hotel?" | 6/24/2005 | See Source »

Owney Morrison is descended from a long line of drinkers. He likes beer for breakfast and whiskey and beer chasers at lunch. "Just one" after work frequently turns into one too many. Sometimes Owney sleeps it off overnight in the hog house, the dressing room at the construction site. This does not please his wife Dolores, who wants to study medicine but is stuck at home with a baby. Dolores is a latter-day stereotype and one that Breslin is less sure of than he is of the guys and dolls along Queens Boulevard. Still, she is vital and feisty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Just One More for the Road | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

Stopping at the employee cafeteria for a morning cup of coffee, staffers at ABC's midtown Manhattan headquarters are apt to find an unlikely table mate these days: the big boss. Unlike his predecessors, new ABC President John Sias often mingles with the troops at breakfast rather than repairing to the 40th-floor executive dining room. "It's not good to use all the executive perks and ask others to cut back," says Sias, 59, a former paratrooper known for his practical jokes and the Captain Marvel T shirts he sometimes wears under his suit and tie. "It's important...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Tightening the Belts at ABC | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

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