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...intimidated by Adelson's massive building program, which he dubs the "Sheldon Avalanche." Adelson's "use of pejorative rhetoric and dismissive language is not so much a reflection of any deep understanding on his part as it is his personality. He can't help himself," Wynn says. His posh inn, Wynn believes, will draw customers who will run up larger tabs--and create fatter profits. "Bigger ain't better. Better is better," Wynn says. The Wynn Macau "would look not like an office building, but a resort. We will always get our market share, because we've got a better...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Competition: Egos Bigger Than China | 10/15/2006 | See Source »

...funny, unsentimental comedy-drama about the tug-of-war between a 32-year-old mother and her 16-year-old daughter. Lauren Graham ("M.Y.O.B.") is charming and comic as a single mom, with parent issues of her own, trying to hold her life together while managing a New England inn full of slightly loopy characters. (Between this and the B&B on "Dawson's Creek," the WB seems to be aiming to be the New England Hospitality Industry Network.) Anyway. Aren't Chandler and Monica cute together...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fall TV Preview | 10/11/2006 | See Source »

...walk from Hurlbut to the KSG tells only a small part of the story. Back then the Inn at Harvard was a Gulf gas station; the Holyoke Center was Dudley House for commuters; Hillel was squash courts. JFK Street was Boylston Street, with a Mobil station and Vespa dealer. A vast trolley yard stood where the KSG now stands, and Quincy was under construction. Radcliffe and Harvard shared only classes, and few extracurricular groups were co-ed. Two years after Brown v. Board of Education, we were almost entirely white, disproportionately preppies, and insensitive to both the discomfort...

Author: By James F. Flug | Title: Back to the Future: 50 Years Later a Freshman Returns | 9/29/2006 | See Source »

Although freshmen trapped in Canaday’s cinderblock cells may envy their Apley Court peers, even the best-situated Harvard students would kill to live in certain Boston University dorms—namely the Hyatt Regency and the Holiday Inn. For more than a decade, BU has been solving its housing shortage problem by stashing a few hundred freshmen in local hotels. This year, there are 484 students residing in the Hyatt and 120 shacking up in the Holiday Inn, according to the Daily Free Press, Boston University’s student newspaper. In the second semester, however...

Author: By Nan Ni, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Eloise, The College Years: BU Students Snag Swank Digs | 9/27/2006 | See Source »

...heart of the Square. Expect a long wait on weekends for brunch, but most nights you can walk right in. It’s a cheap and casual locale for an evening with friends or a low-key date. Location: 1105 Massachusetts Ave. (A few blocks past the Harvard Inn) Ratings (out of 5) Overall: 3.5 Cleanliness: 4 Service: 3 Atmosphere...

Author: By Carolyn A. Sheehan, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: THE GASTRONOMER | 9/22/2006 | See Source »

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