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...overcooked prose as "Time, a leaf, a life, a cloud, was forgotten." Skip them and go right to the comix. Here McKean's visual prowess justifies the metaphysical themes. "Cages" mostly takes place in an apartment building that Leo Sabarsky, a painter, has just moved into. There he meets Jonathan Rush, a secretive, Salman Rushdie-like writer whose latest book incites riots. Completing the traditional arts, Angel, a musician who can make stones sing, lives there too. Mixing Ingmar Bergman with Monty Python, strange, vaguely metaphorical characters pop in and out. Pudgy, bowler-hatted men regularly visit the writer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life, the Universe and Sequential Art | 8/27/2002 | See Source »

...Wall Street, environmentalists who have been bashing "evil" corporations for years have suddenly found themselves with plenty of allies. But the planet needs profitable, innovative businesses even more than it needs environmentalists. "It is companies, not advocacy groups, that will create the technologies needed to save the environment," says Jonathan Wootliff, a former Greenpeace executive turned business consultant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Too Green For Their Own Good? | 8/26/2002 | See Source »

...Gore is having a hard enough time convincing Democratic Party leaders that he deserves another shot at the presidency in 2004. But now he may be having trouble where it really counts: with his moneymen. The latest setback comes from Jonathan Tisch, the New York City hotelier who has generously backed Gore causes since 1988, giving the Democratic Party $325,000 during Gore's 2000 presidential bid. Sources tell TIME that Tisch recently informed Gore he's uncommitted for 2004. That might not sound like a rebuff, but considering Tisch's previously unwavering support for Gore, Democratic insiders were stunned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gore's Money Troubles | 8/19/2002 | See Source »

Real New Yorkers are like Jonathan Brady, a Citibank exec-cum-off broadway playwright and producer. Brady’s play “Heroes,” which I saw a few weeks ago, exposes the New York spirit—a spirit he shares. The two twenty-something protagonists shed their mundane workaday lives to fight crime as real life superheroes, eventually capturing the “SoHo strangler.” They, like Brady and all real New Yorkers, seek to live extraordinarily; they want something more; they need to be unique...

Author: By Ganesh N. Sitaraman, | Title: The Real New Yorker | 8/16/2002 | See Source »

...Jonathan H. Esensten ’04, a Crimson editor, is a biochemical sciences concentrator in Lowell House. In his lab at Harvard Medical School, he’s learning the joys of transient transfections and Western blots. The data look promising...

Author: By Jonathan H. Esensten, | Title: Biotech Valley, Boston? | 7/26/2002 | See Source »

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