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...will feature $30 rock-concert-style T shirts with sayings and imagery lifted from the store's archives (think Lord & Taylor's red rose and an art director's wit circa 1954). Upscale chiffon dresses, sweaters and blouses in the $70 to $280 range are also part of the classic yet sexy and modern line. "Lord & Taylor is what America stands for rhetorically, and I find its idiosyncratic nature really appealing," says Bradley. What other store plays the national anthem every morning...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Studying the Classics | 9/21/2007 | See Source »

...Classic Country (Gibbs Smith, Publisher) Textile and interior designer Kathryn Ireland reveals how she uses fabrics, combining color and texture, to achieve the bright, eclectic look of her rooms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bookshelf Sep. 16, 2007 | 9/21/2007 | See Source »

Next up for Harvard is the Crimson Classic, in which the team plays host to a four team round robin tournament at Lavietes Pavillion. Coach Weiss has one game in particular circled: Friday at 7:30 p.m. vs. Dartmouth. It will be the Crimson’s first Ivy League match...

Author: By Douglas A. Baerlein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Women Poised For Ivy Success | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

...world's smallest producers. But its wines are smooth and tasty, and a few of the country's dozen or so commercial labels are internationally renowned. For a recent dinner of frogs legs, thick yogurt, and saut?ed liver, Ramzi invited a TIME correspondent to drink a Massaya classic red, not one of his fanciest, but one that best reflects the region, with a peppery taste and smells of mint and thyme. The humble cinsualt grape he uses doesn't have a strong personality of its own, but absorbs the surrounding environment like a sponge. Much like Lebanon itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Table Wines of the Hizballah Heartland | 9/20/2007 | See Source »

Foreigners is written, like all Phillips' books, in a style of even, sorrowful precision that enrages as it informs. Its anger is the stronger for being deployed with such classic restraint. And the stories he chooses to share speak for thousands of other lives that are, and always will be, untold. A powerful complement to such novels as A Distant Shore (which won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize three years ago), Foreigners is really one piece of a mosaic that Phillips has been carefully and patiently putting together all his life. Britain cannot know itself, he suggests, until it acknowledges...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Black and Blue | 9/19/2007 | See Source »

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