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...City," he says. "It's Fun City." He has a point. It's a Vegas where the average tourist gambles only four hours in his four-day stay. That's fine with the casinos, since today they make more on rooms, drinks, food, shopping and entertainment--the stuff they used to give away to get you to gamble...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Strip Is Back! | 7/26/2004 | See Source »

...favorite films, Harold and Maude. Like that movie, Garden State quickly establishes an off-kilter tone, using odd pacing and such surrealistic touches as the giant pet cemetery in Portman's character's backyard to create a marijuana-like haze between the main character and his surroundings. "I love stuff that's totally realistic, then dips across the line," he says. "Sometimes I crossed the line...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Zach Braff Has A Big Laugh | 7/26/2004 | See Source »

When Ali Rodriguez was one of Venezuela's communist guerrillas in the 1960s and '70s, his chief duty ostensibly was making bombs. But Rodriguez admits he knew less about explosives than about oil--the stuff of real political power in Venezuela, which possesses the hemisphere's mother lode of petroleum reserves. "In the mountains, I organized seminars on oil administration," says Rodriguez, 66, whom fellow combatants remember as being the same energy-policy wonk then that he is today. "I committed myself body and soul to it." Not surprisingly, his petro-philosophy was more Marx than Rockefeller, and his rhetoric...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Energy: The Latin Oil Czar | 7/26/2004 | See Source »

...humdrum, confused life of mid-twentysomethings has a ready accomplice in the sprawling shopping malls and freeway-bound office parks of New Jersey, the stuff that nightmares and dreams are made of for the expanse of anonymous, white-housed suburbia that hums between the on-ramps. The staples of quiet, middle-class Garden State living are all here, sans the last PATH train back from the city. Like those who’ve never been, Largeman (we can imagine him telling his L.A. friends he grew up in New York) has no inclination to go back, only an obligation...

Author: By Alexander L. Pasternack, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Movie Review: Garden State | 7/23/2004 | See Source »

...fateful meeting with Pilates: "He said, 'Well, stay with me five lessons, and if it doesn't get better or well, I'll give you your money back.' It was only $5 in those days. By the third lesson, it felt wonderful. I thought, This is pretty marvelous stuff." Seeing the value of the hundreds of movements Pilates had conceived, Kryzanowska kept going to his studio. "I was there all the time," she says. "And the next thing you knew, he was making me teach everybody...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Still Swinging | 7/19/2004 | See Source »

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