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...steady stream of Halloween shoppers.Terri Christopher, the fashion buyer for both Newbury Comics and Hootenanny, said that the stores have bought more accessories and fewer packaged costumes than in previous years.“We are a company of creative individuals and we support people who want to express their creativity and individuality,” Christopher said. “It makes it a lot more fun if people can pick and choose what they want.” Christopher said that this year’s most popular items include Napoleon Dynamite costumes, “anything pirate...

Author: By Shifra B. Mincer, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Students Deck Out as Witching Hour Nears | 10/28/2005 | See Source »

...start saving points toward the biggest trip of them all: a flight to space. Arlington, Virginia-based Space Adventures is now offering suborbital flights?that's just beyond our atmosphere, 100 km above the earth?from 2008 for those who have racked up 20 million points with American Express, or 10 million air miles with U.S. Airways. That's equivalent to 400 times around the globe. Until then, for 275,000 air miles and $8,000, would-be space adventurers can take a flight on a MiG-25 jet fighter, which gets you 25 km high...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Out of this World | 10/24/2005 | See Source »

...start saving points toward the biggest trip of them all: a flight to space. Arlington, Virginia-based Space Adventures is now offering suborbital flights - that's just beyond our atmosphere, 100 km above the earth - from 2008 for those who have racked up 20 million points with American Express, or 10 million air miles with U.S. Airways. That's equivalent to 400 times around the globe. Until then, for 275,000 air miles and $8,000, would-be space adventurers can take a flight on a MiG-25 jet fighter, which gets you 25 km high...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Out Of This World | 10/23/2005 | See Source »

Whitehouse never envisioned spending her later years this way. She and her husband Alva Don raised four children. In the 1980s they lived in Montana, where he earned a good living as a long-haul truck driver for Pacific Intermountain Express. But in 1986 he was killed on the job in a highway accident attributed to faulty maintenance on his truck, as his company struggled to survive the cutthroat pricing of congressionally ordered deregulation. After her husband's death, Whitehouse knew the future would be tough, but she was confident in her economic survival. After all, the company had promised...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Broken Promise | 10/23/2005 | See Source »

...century life, like the answering machine and the fax. Though one might suspect her of being a grumpy traditionalist in these matters, or even a Luddite, Martin has pleasantly mixed feelings about the new technology. E-mail, she says, is "the best means of quick communication since the pony express." Take that, telephone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: NOTES ON NETIQUETTE | 10/20/2005 | See Source »

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