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...time to come back. In June the airport christened a sparkling, soaring and sunlit new version of the IAB known officially and underwhelmingly as Terminal 4. But that dull moniker can't hide the fact that America's newest gateway may be its best. The graceful steel-and-glass structure boasts 40-ft. ceilings, Mongolian granite floors and colorful artwork and architecture that should distract anyone waiting in a long line. "We are trying to make an airport an enjoyable place to be," says Hans Mohrmann, the enthusiastic Dutchman who is president of Schiphol U.S.A., a division of Amsterdam...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At Your Service: Terminal Envy | 8/20/2001 | See Source »

...terminal even has its own Main Street: 100,000 sq. ft. of shops and restaurants lined by steel lights that echo the Statue of Liberty. Small tables dot the area and make it feel more like an Italian piazza than a sterile airport food court. What's particularly refreshing is the distinctive food offerings, such as the first-ever airport Sylvia's, a branch of the famous Harlem soul-food restaurant, and Erwin's Glatt Kosher Deli. This airport wants you to visit: the so-called dwell time, the minutes you spend pre- or postflight, is estimated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At Your Service: Terminal Envy | 8/20/2001 | See Source »

...That meant cutting enough fat from the budget to make Bush?s $1.3 trillion tax cut an affordable idea, and since Daniels left his family at home in Indianapolis and moved into a one-bedroom Washington apartment whose walls remain bare, he?s been flashing some pretty mean steel. He stared down Tom Daschle?s Senate over $2 billion in extra farm aid. He cut the $40 billion Donald Rumsfeld wanted for the Pentagon in half. And he even sent his own cost-appraisal team to the wreckage of Tropical Storm Allison to kill a Federal Emergency Management Agency request...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Person of the Week: Mitch Daniels | 8/17/2001 | See Source »

...cobblestones. East German troops carrying rolls of barbed wire, concrete pillars, stone blocks, picks, and shovels leapt out of their trucks. Four hours later, millions of Berliners lived in a huge communist pen which over the next decade would be broadened and built into an automated armed fortress of steel and concrete -a fortress which stood as a monstrous rebuke to freedom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Monstrous Rebuke to Freedom | 8/15/2001 | See Source »

...refrigerators are growing 10% a year. And many are sold by U.S. firms. Says General Electric spokesman Terry Dunn: "Americans take big fridges for granted, but in Europe it's like owning a BMW or a Jag." Market research led GE to pitch its offerings to local tastes: stainless-steel finishes for the British and Dutch, warm colors for the Italians, artsy images for the French and Spanish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Global Briefing: Aug. 13, 2001 | 8/13/2001 | See Source »

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