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WHEN JACK and Jaye Hickey decided to sell their classic six-bedroom, Cape Cod house on the 17th tee of the Skokie Country Club, in Glencoe, Ill., they counted on the usual headaches. Open houses, listing agents and a broker's fee are par for the course...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Home Advantage | 10/18/2004 | See Source »

...these stores carry everything from early 1930s Jazz to the latest in underground techno. And though Newbury Comics maintains a carefully constructed bohemian vibe, the real deal can only be found in the endangered species of Mom-and-Pop record shops. So throw on your vintage rock concert tee, turn off that free jazz record and prepare yourself for musty rooms stuffed with some of the greatest music ever made...

Author: By Daniel J. Mandel, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Give a Little Spin | 10/14/2004 | See Source »

...first, TaylorMade's r7 Quad driver looks, well, screwy. The season's most buzzed about golf club has four holes in its head and four weighted cartridges that are screwed into them with a special wrench--the first mass-market club with such features. It allows golfers to set tee-shot trajectory and direction to their liking at the start of a round, without breaking the rules. TaylorMade is betting that the Quad's $600 price won't scare off serious swingers, who seem to have an insatiable appetite for whizbang clubs like the Big Bertha, the last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: When a Hole in Your Head is a Good Thing | 5/31/2004 | See Source »

...Harvard Medical School professor and the president of the Mind/Body Medical Institute in Boston. When you relax, relax. Ex--Orlando Magic coach Doc Rivers, canned this season after a 1-10 start, says his biggest mistake in Orlando was never turning off the hoops. "I'd approach the tee and wonder if a play could work better if Tracy McGrady moved two feet to the right," says Rivers, an avid golfer. "I have to handle that better next time around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Management: Full-Court Stress | 4/5/2004 | See Source »

Each day, officials at TTIC (pronounced tee-tic) examine 5,000 to 6,000 pieces of intelligence, trying to assemble the best picture of what's out there. Staffed by representatives of about a dozen government entities, TTIC strives to address the failure of agencies to share vital intelligence before 9/11. "We have an FBI analyst who's sitting next to a CIA analyst who's sitting next to a Secret Service analyst who's sitting next to a Coast Guard analyst," says TTIC chief John Brennan, a senior CIA officer. "They take information from their different systems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Threat Analysis: Decoding The Chatter | 3/29/2004 | See Source »

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