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...where were the ingredients? There were scary words on the labels--WARNING and DANGER! KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN--and some nasty things I recognized (bleach, ammonia, the generic word disinfectant). With cereal boxes detailing everything from trans fats to soluble fiber, I thought there would be exhaustive lists of everything in those bottles and sprays. But there weren't. If I didn't rinse the bathtub thoroughly, what kind of residue would my daughter's bottom be resting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Haz-Mats At Home? | 5/7/2006 | See Source »

...variety of seating options conducive to both socializing and study, and light fare designed to accommodate both snacking and meals. Students also noted the importance of having healthy food offerings that would serve as energy boosters throughout the night, and also strongly indicated a preference for name-brand over generic coffee. The cafe is one of several construction projects going on at Lamont this summer, including the replacement of heating and cooling equipment, removal and resetting of the outside steps, replacement of stair treads in four interior stairways, and renovation of the Woodberry Poetry Room. “It?...

Author: By Elaine Chen, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Lamont Cafe Plans Finalized | 4/13/2006 | See Source »

...High School Musical: the very title, proudly generic, cues you to the movie's embrace of antique cliches. So does the plot. Troy (Zac Efron, a cutie who manages to channel both Michael J, Fox and David Cassidy in their early adorable years) is the resident Anglo basketball star - we said it was a fantasy - and Gabrielle (Vanessa Anne Hutchinson, from the Soledad O'Brien breed of smiling semi-hispanics) is the new brainiac, at a school that might as well be called Rainbow Coalition High. The hero and heroine's best friends are African-American; there's a Hollywood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gotta Sing! Gotta Dance! | 4/7/2006 | See Source »

...Malcolm X in the novel surprisingly does not overshadow the other characters. The depiction of Malcolm Little—called “Red” by the dodgy crowd into which he predictably falls prey—as a young boy in Harlem is, at first, somewhat generic. He is the archetypal young arrival to the city that “wanted to see everything, to find whatever there was to find,” but manages only to find crime and a drug-induced stupor...

Author: By Jessica M. Righthand, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Baker Imagines a Vibrant 1940s Harlem | 4/4/2006 | See Source »

...foil a murder--and they take, Robin Hood-- like, only from the rich. (So they skip the give-to-the-poor bit. Nobody's perfect!) In fact, Heist's greatest crime is robbing innocent movies of their clichs: the Tarantino-gone-PG banter, the whooshing camera shots, the generic peppy jazz that sounds as if it were lifted from a Putumayo Presents Lighthearted Caper Music of the World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Thick with Thieves | 3/26/2006 | See Source »

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