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...dressed like a student, one in a cheap jacket and tie - were also strapping on large side arms and testing their mikes. Presumably some sort of covert backup. The soldiers behind them were standing, guns at the ready, in full Spetsnaz battle dress, as if they were somehow expecting us to be attacked on the tarmac of the largest Russian base in the North Caucasus. Koshman clearly takes no chances. We landed between a line of helicopter gunships to our left and fighter bombers to our right. Koshman - who, we had been told, was our guide for the week - said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Chechnya Diary: Into the Inferno | 2/22/2000 | See Source »

...people living in an unruffled commune, the symbiosis of modern man and primal nature. And if these attractions don't give you a high, then the free dope will--it sprouts like kudzu all over the place. Now Richard, the narrator of the book and film The Beach, has somehow reached this ideal island in Thailand, this littoral dream made literal. But Utopia isn't good enough for Richard, because he's questing, he's weak, he's ornery...he's Leonardo DiCaprio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The Beach Boy | 2/21/2000 | See Source »

...least of the triumphs of Nicholas Shakespeare's unimprovable (and unstoppably readable) Bruce Chatwin (Doubleday; 618 pages; $35) is that it looks unflinchingly at the vanities, lies and manipulations of a "heroically selfish" man and yet somehow makes him plausibly sympathetic. To understand is to forgive, they say in France, and by poring through the unpublished notebooks of both Chatwin and his friends, by talking to seemingly everyone who knew him and by training his novelist's urbanity on all this, Shakespeare shows how the dandified collector of odd treasures could honestly mooch off duchesses while maintaining that one should...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Prodigal Nomad | 2/21/2000 | See Source »

PANGLOSS POWER Here's something to really smile about. A 30-year study shows that folks with a positive perspective live 19% longer than pessimists. How this might work is not clear, but it may be that an optimistic attitude somehow strengthens the immune system or simply inspires people to take better care of themselves. In the study, the optimists were happy to credit themselves when things went right, and they tended to view crises as fleeting. Pessimists, on the other hand, were chronic self-blamers. Most of us are, no doubt, a bit of both...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Your Health: Feb. 21, 2000 | 2/21/2000 | See Source »

...American elite 25 years from now won't charge an admission price exactly; still, business success will be its way of assuring itself that an applicant has what it takes to become a member. Those who haven't hit it big as entrepreneurs will somehow seem to have talents that are merely peripheral. The qualities that the elite respects will be a kind of aggressive and even ruthless energy and imagination. Superpromising young people will set themselves on a course to become David Geffen, not Dean Acheson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Will Be The Next Elite? | 2/21/2000 | See Source »

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