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...harnessed into one of 16 seats facing in all four directions and mounted on the building's ultimate tower. Without warning you are shot up, as if sprung from a killer rubber band, 160 ft. into the sky at 45 m.p.h. and four Gs. And then, dear Lord!, you slam back down at negative gravity, your body pleading to soar through the restraints. Up and down you go a few more times in decreasing extremes. The whole thing, which lasts 31 sec., is a great, bearable kick. It's like experiencing, at warp speed, a manic-depressive attack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Architecture: JUST WHAT LAS VEGAS NEEDED | 5/6/1996 | See Source »

Against NYT, however, it all came together for the Crimson for the first time since the Pacific game. Reinhard started things off with a three-run homer down the left-field line in the first inning, and Franzese added a grand slam and a two-run triple in back-to-back innings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Softball Recieves Western Tune-Up | 4/2/1996 | See Source »

...time to toss the beta carotene pills. In the second slam this year, scientists who studied 1,800 people over a decade found that daily supplements do nothing to lower the chances of dying from cancer or cardiovascular disease. Still, eating fruits and vegetables rich in the nutrient appears to reduce the risk of disease; researchers now suspect that this is owing to an overall healthy diet and not to beta carotene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook, Mar. 18, 1996 | 3/18/1996 | See Source »

...bloody agent of the repression they had fled. "He made approaches to a lot of us," said Ahmed Chalabi, leader of an opposition group. "He wanted us to follow him and cooperate. But nobody took him seriously. We consider him a war criminal. We didn't slam the door in his face; we just ignored...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEAD ON ARRIVAL | 3/4/1996 | See Source »

...GLIDING THROUGH SLAM-glam media roles--senatorial wannabe in The Candidate, screenwriter in The Way We Were, hotshot reporter in All the President's Men--Robert Redford gave some people the idea that he had missed his true calling: anchorman! He had it all: the authority and irony, the requisite twinkle. That craggy charisma would have sat smartly behind a Formica desk. But then news imitated art: the networks created their own lower-wattage Redfords in Brokaw, Jennings, Stone Phillips. And now, when Redford finally gets into a TV-news movie, he's nearly 60, too old to begin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: HAIR TODAY, STAR TOMORROW | 3/4/1996 | See Source »

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