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Customers receive a small card that reads “The end of the day is the beginning” before feasting on the French-Vietnamese cuisine that is the stuff of a late-night muncher’s dreams...

Author: By Maria S. Pedroza, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Night Out | 11/6/2003 | See Source »

With the flair that makes him popular in debates, if not the polls, Sharpton shot back, “I would make sure Bush has all of his stuff out.... I’d change the locks so that all his crowd will stay...

Author: By Jonathan P. Abel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Democrats Look To ‘Rock’ the Youth Vote in Boston Debate | 11/5/2003 | See Source »

...Bush administration grapples its way to an exit strategy, the neo-conservative vision in which an invasion of Iraq would create a Middle East beachhead of liberal-democratic, secular, free-market, pro-Western and Israel-friendly sentiment is looking increasingly like the stuff of fantasy. The leading U.S. constitutional adviser to ambassador Bremer last week told the British Daily Telegraph that "The end constitutional product is very likely to make many people in the U.S. government unhappy." Dr. Noah Feldman added that "any democratically elected Iraqi government is unlikely to be secular and unlikely to be pro-Israel. And frankly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Building an Iraq Exit Strategy | 11/5/2003 | See Source »

...other stuff, the games and the "talking" and the God knows what else, it doesn't scare her. It's an urban campus, she points out, in a busy downtown neighborhood. "They don't have a street corner where all the kids can hang out. Inside the computer is their street corner." She compares it to listening to the Grateful Dead when she was growing up in the 1970s, back when rock 'n' roll was still new and computers were safely confined to the fallout shelter. After all, she argues, all teenagers of every era have something that they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Old School, New Tricks | 11/3/2003 | See Source »

...decidedly low-tech. Employees used to jot notes in black, spiral-bound paper notebooks and later transfer the most important information to their computers. Now they're toting around laptops, and instead of just taking notes at meetings, Mallick and his colleagues are exchanging files, looking up stuff on the Web--a description of a competitor's product, for instance--and consulting their calendars to choose a time for their next meeting. "Before, everyone would leave, and maybe 13 e-mails would go around," Mallick says. By dealing with questions as they arise, staff members can move on "action items...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business Unplugged | 11/3/2003 | See Source »

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