Word: shapely
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...next three days were marked by serial slowdowns at some of the biggest sites on the Web: Amazon.com eBay, CNN.com (owned by Time Warner, parent company of TIME), ZDNet, ETrade, Excite. Like so many virtual vandals before him, the phantom foe clearly craved attention. He got it in the shape of a front-page media frenzy, a full-scale FBI investigation and a hastily convened White House conference on Web hacking. And yet he stubbornly refused to show up at his own party, prompting PC paranoia and all manner of conspiracy theories...
There will be a beauty pill that will make your skin look tan without getting leathery from baking in the sun. A pill to change your hair color, shape and texture. Even gimmick-averse Leonard Lauder, head of the Estee Lauder cosmetics giant, predicts that the switch from external to internal beauty products is coming. "Chances are very strong," he says, "that before the end of the next century, we'll take a pill that will make our skin look a lot better...
...view doesn't stop fans from craving ringside seats. The senses are a huge part of the experience. The smell of popcorn, the crush of bodies, the communal sense of anticipation and the space itself all add to the story of the entertainment. Spaces, architectural enclosures, shape our relation to an event. You can pray at home. But a church, mosque or synagogue gives prayer scale, grace and a heightened sense of spirituality because of the aura of sacred ritual deemed appropriate within the religious house. People cling to ritual. It gives structure and comfort to chaos. It creates...
...Cole Hauser: We definitely had to train before making the film. We got there a month early to do things like rugby running. It was very crucial to be in great shape-for all the stunts and fights, we all needed to be in tip-top shape. As hard as it was, we needed strength mentally and physically...
...running away from the truth. No one knows that better than Groopman, who hurt his back 20 years ago and was told to rest until it healed. Not satisfied, he went doctor shopping until he found a surgeon who promised to fix it. Unfortunately, Groopman wound up in worse shape after the operation. Now, after two decades of suffering and intense physical therapy, the physician still hasn't completely healed himself. Sometimes, as Groopman learned the hard way, the best course is to do what your original doctor ordered...