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...DENVER (Democratic): An autographed Broncos football; stuffed toy buffaloes; a cell phone; a putter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Everyone Loves a Freebie | 8/24/1998 | See Source »

...data released last week were encouraging on that score. Most major retailers said sales surged in July, for the seventh straight gain this year. "Our customers are happy to pay $3,000 for a Chanel suit or $800 for a Prada bag," says Nancy Husted, a spokeswoman for Denver's Neiman Marcus store. In Washington the Federal Reserve found vigorous spending across the country on items from housing to air travel. Barbara Szosz, a North Carolina travel agent, reports that her clients are traveling more, and more expensively, with trips to Europe, Australia and New Zealand increasingly popular...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can We Bear To Keep Buying? | 8/17/1998 | See Source »

...shalt be huge. No phone company now has to invest billions in an expensive network. Instead it can just piggyback on other folks' networks, which have excess capacity to rent. Some upstarts are building networks of their own. Says Joseph Nacchio, CEO of Qwest, a telecom upstart based in Denver: "All the old reasons for scale are gone." Nacchio, who left the No. 3 slot at AT&T to run Qwest, compares the latest round of mergers to "an oligarchy buying a monopoly." The future, he predicts, will bring a more pluralistic, competitive system...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Scary Splice | 8/10/1998 | See Source »

Would the program work elsewhere? "It can work anywhere," says Batt, who came to the region from Denver, where he ran a 565-bed hospital. "It's a way to help patients help themselves." O'Leary puts it this way: "It gives you a good feeling that you aren't a charity case...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Farmington, Maine: An Old Tradition Solves A Current Crisis | 8/3/1998 | See Source »

...enticements and entrapments have worked: a place on the FBI's ten-most-wanted list and a manhunt stretching as far as Denver have produced nothing. A $1 million reward has found no takers. Until two weeks ago, Rudolph had not been seen since the day after the bombing, when he rented the video Kull the Conqueror, stocked up on raisins, trail mix and batteries and bought $11 worth of burgers and fries from the Burger King in his hometown of Murphy, N.C. The trail had gone stone cold. And then on July 11, George Nordmann, 71, owner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Forest Is His Ally | 7/27/1998 | See Source »

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