Word: yearsâ
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...dead franchise and emerged with a critical and commercial success. Rocky Balboa was a touching, honest, personal look at longing for past glory; Stallone held off from pandering so much that it didn't even have a training montage. But Rambo?the fourth one, and the first in 20 years???is a movie without apology for the foreign markets that still adore him: Rambo quickly gets talked into saving captured missionaries in Burma, and then Rambo kicks ass?age and the physics of ballistics be damned...
...year?and years???to come, science coverage will continue to be part of the core of what we do. Look for our Mind/Body issue every year around this time, as well as our annual environmental issue in the spring, our fitness issue in June and our year-in-medicine wrap-up in the fall. And, of course, whenever science happens?which is to say all the time?you can find it here and on Time.com...
...watches. One of this year's stylish, not-to-be-missed introductions is the RPM collection from Canadian jeweler Birks. Available this fall at Birks in Canada and at Mayors, the company's sister chain in the U.S., the Swiss-made line?Birks' first new sport collection in five years???boasts four different adventure-ready versions, all for less than $1,300 each...
...upscale shopping streets and few malls). But today India is experiencing a mall-building boom, perhaps a response to the sharp rise of newly affluent consumers?many under age 25. Analysts at Bain & Co. predict that the luxury market could grow 25% a year over the next three years???a far cry from the days when it was the exclusive preserve of Cartier-bedecked maharajas...
ELLIS ISLAND STEPHEN WILKES Sixteen years??ago, the north side of Ellis Island, the famed New York entry point for generations of immigrants, was magnificently renovated. But the hospital compound on the south side, where many arrivals were held in quarantine, was left to decay. For five years, Wilkes roamed the disintegrating buildings, with their cracked plaster and peeling paint, to make pictures of their gorgeous decrepitude. (Congress has since allocated money to preserve them.) Decline has never looked more haunting...