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Word: manhattanization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Cory Booker lives in a penthouse apartment with a picture-postcard view of the Manhattan skyline. It's just what you would expect from a 31-year-old Stanford graduate, Rhodes scholar and Yale-trained lawyer who wears tweed pants. Except that when Booker goes home, he waits at least 10 minutes for the elevator. And when it comes, he crowds on with ex-cons, tiny children and old ladies, all of whom know his name. A uniformed guard pushes the buttons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Savior of Newark? | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

...influences the others multiplicatively. Therefore my unwillingness to back off my predictions about the power of the white-collar tsunami bearing down on us. Unsettling madness is afoot. Especially if I'm a 48-year-old white-collar staff member or middle manager entombed in a corporate tower in Manhattan or Miami or Milan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What Will We Do For Work | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

...about our future, of course, is that the kind of cash we will most want to use will be digital. But the paperless wallet has proved as practical as the paperless office. In late 1997, two New York City banks tried an experiment on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. They spent millions installing special digital-cash-card machines in all kinds of retail sites--hairdressers, retail stores, even taxicabs. Then they distributed--for free--smart digital cards. Surely, if digital cash was this easy to use, people would stop using the green stuff. Wrong. It was just too hard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Cash Completely Vanish? | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

...vote that could limit her numbers," says TIME New York correspondent Elaine Rivera. "She can't afford to make any more enemies, especially upstate." Lazio, on the other hand is dealing with an opponent that Rivera says Pataki, with his name and his money, "really could have stomped" outside Manhattan - and if Lazio can hang onto his centrism, that 32 percent has a lot of room to grow. Lazio will take off this week on an upstate barnstorm through Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Elmira and Binghamton, towns the First Lady has had to herself thus far. And then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can Hillary Break the Carpetbagger Ceiling? | 5/21/2000 | See Source »

...problem for long. And the young, handsome, likable congressman from suburban Long Island is a good moderate-to-conservative Republican, with none of Rudy's enemies in the state GOP and fewer problems with Republicans in upstate New York, where Giuliani was almost as much of a carpetbagger from Manhattan as Clinton is from Washington. Lazio backed Newt Gingrich, but also has a moderate record on family leave and abortion rights, which will blunt some of Clinton's attacks on him as a lockstep GOP party man. Pooley says the race may well depend on which vote is bigger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rudy's Out. Does That Mean Hillary Is In? | 5/19/2000 | See Source »

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