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...town's fishermen inspired The Old Man and the Sea. Last Monday night, from out of La Terraza bar, which he once patronized, a bronze head of Hemingway looked to the coast, toward five young men and the sea. They crawled silently aboard a homemade raft loaded with plastic soda bottles filled with fresh water, canned condensed milk, cheese, knives and fishing equipment. A big tarp was onboard to protect them from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The View From Cojimar | 8/29/1994 | See Source »

Wishman's 1962 classic "Nude on the Moon" will be shown. None of her films are heavy on plot, but here goes: two men ride to the moon in what looks like an enormous aluminum soda can to find a female, nudist utopia. This is "Earth Girls Are "Easy" and "Teenage Vixens from Outer Space" meet the sex-shop slaves, fulfilling the horny fantasies of the Earthling...

Author: By G. WILLIAM Winborn, | Title: Harvard Welcomes the Uncrowned | 8/12/1994 | See Source »

Passing the shiny carts of commercial food and the the yells describing the warmth of cigarettes and the coolness of soda, the real Deadhead walked toward the stadium. He had tickets; they were ordered through Grateful Dead Ticket Sales (GDTS) so as to avoid the outrageous service charges that Ticketmaster attaches to most events while their operators drone on in what is rarely recognizable as English. Pearl Jam, currently in self-imposed stadium exile due to differences with Ticketmaster, would do well to adopt a policy similar to the Dead's; start a hotline and provide a mechanism whereby fans...

Author: By Edward F. Mulkerin iii, | Title: Jerry Garcia's Free Market | 7/19/1994 | See Source »

...Mixed drinks. No, not gimlets and Sex on the Beach, but try some cranberry juice in you orange or grapefruit, with a shot of seltzer from the soda...

Author: By Edward F. Mulkerin iii, | Title: DART BOARD | 7/6/1994 | See Source »

Which is exactly what attracts Coca-Cola and other consumer firms to teens in the first place. American adolescents last year spent as much as $89 billion on the latest trends in food, clothing, videos, music and, of course, soda; teens spent more than $3 billion of their own money on soft drinks alone. Yet America's 27.8 million teenagers are merely the vanguard of a global 12-to-20 market that numbers nearly 1 billion youths. Moreover, this mass of teens, particularly in the developing nations of Asia and Latin America, are far more influenced by U.S. products...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Teens Buy It? | 5/30/1994 | See Source »

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