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...beginning of his 70th year, jazz saxophone colossus Sonny Rollins has released the modestly titled This is What I Do. As its name suggests, this album documents the present state of Rollins' traveling band...

Author: By Arts Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: New Albums | 11/3/2000 | See Source »

...hopes to begin testing at the end of next year. The company aims to carry as much as 30 tons of cargo or 240 passengers. In Berlin a company called CargoLifter launched a high-profile public stock offering on May 30 to fund the building of an 853-ft. colossus--49 ft. longer than the ill-fated Hindenburg. "I've been watching the airship industry for 15 years, and now it's getting very exciting," says Christian Schulthess, who for 20 years was a pilot with Balair-CTA, the charter subsidiary of Swissair. He is now president of Skyship Cruises...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Than Hot Air | 7/17/2000 | See Source »

...Seagram's Universal music group, currently the biggest on earth, could deliver Limp Bizkit and Sting to millions of European households via Vivendi's 50%-controlled Vizzavi Internet portal. Such synergies will be enshrined forever--or at least until the next deal--in the proposed name of the merged colossus: Vivendi Universal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: J'Adore Content | 6/26/2000 | See Source »

...rare undergraduate who truly cares about the powers that run this colossus of higher education. Stiff-necked bureaucratic types, after all, have little to say about whether you attend a keg party in Winthrop House or spend your Saturday nights doing homework...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Behind the Scenes, A Sprawling Bureaucracy Runs the Many Parts of the Nation's Oldest University | 6/23/2000 | See Source »

...against a backdrop of landscapes transformed from their natural state to suit the needs of agriculture and industry. Various societies have degraded huge areas without suffering dire consequences. In the U.S., pioneers plowed up almost the entire prairie on the nation's way to becoming an agricultural and economic colossus, but America lost what may have been the greatest concentration of animal life on the planet. Britain, Japan, Korea and Thailand are among the societies that prospered even as they converted their original natural systems into farms and industrial parks, diverted and despoiled their rivers and re-engineered their coasts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Condition Critical | 4/26/2000 | See Source »

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