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...year-old Caroline continued the roller-coaster progress she had begun on Sunday. This second round of sessions would see her and cousin Evie riding ?Big Thunder Mountain Railway? no fewer than three times, the third by themselves with hands raised the whole way. Caroline would not try ?Splash Mountain? again after the harrowing experience two days earlier, but did say, ?Maybe next year when I?m seven.? Which seems to indicate we?re coming back to Disney next year. My skis seem headed for the annual spring tag sale at the church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Coasters, Big Games and Big Game | 2/21/2004 | See Source »

...Square Defense Fund distributed flyers along the route in an attempt to prevent Tyler’s new proposal from making a splash...

Author: By Joseph M. Tartakoff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Boat? Car?...Tour Bus! | 2/19/2004 | See Source »

...Speaking of ?Big Thunder,? that was our second roller coaster of Day One, which leads me to roller-coaster dynamics. The first coaster was ?Splash Mountain,? and that turned out to be just a bit much for Caroline. But ?Big Thunder? was just right, even to the point where, second time around, she was trying hands-in-the-air, at least when heading into the turns. I think roller coasters are useful measuring sticks in a young person?s life, and I, as a dad, found it poignant that my little Caroline could now handle ?Big Thunder.? I am pleased...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Disney Diary: Into the House of Mouse | 2/17/2004 | See Source »

...launch her move to New York. And along the way she discovered her talent for creating distinctive and original accessories. She moved on to become senior designer for accessories at Calvin Klein and then joined Marc Jacobs. The Gap recruited her in 2002, and she immediately made a splash with her leather, denim and corduroy handbags. ''Gap is such an iconic brand, and it means so much to so many people,'' says Hill, explaining her move from high fashion to mass market. "Things don't have to be expensive to be beautiful." For inspiration she dove into the company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Emma Hill | 2/16/2004 | See Source »

Remember good old-fashioned oil on canvas? Judging by the splash that Julian Schnabel, the high diver of the contemporary American art scene, has been making in Frankfurt, it's still alive and kicking in the age of multimedia installations. At least that's true of Schnabel's brand of oil painting, in which buckets of pigment are applied to vast tarpaulins, sails and boxing-ring mats. His retrospective, "Julian Schnabel Paintings 1978-2003," at the Schirn Museum until April 25, has attracted more ink than anything since Christo wrapped up the Reichstag. Paint could hardly find a more forceful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Patron Saint of Paint | 2/15/2004 | See Source »

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