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Topic: Well Always Have Paris


  
  University’s traditions replicated in Paris
The University’s new Paris Center is at the heart of a burgeoning intellectual and cultural community, located along the banks of the Seine in an area known as Paris’ 13th arrondisement.
“Paris is one of the world’s great intellectual centers and offers vast resources for scholars of art, architecture, music, cultural studies, the history of the city, and history in general, to name just a few,” she said.
The University chose Paris partly because of its accessibility.
chronicle.uchicago.edu /030417/paris.shtml   (1174 words)

  
 She'll Always Have Paris
On the surface, Paris is the kind of girl a 1980s Wall Street type might describe as a "bitch on wheels" : authoritative and highly organized, with a need to be in control.
She says that a quality she shares with Paris is "I tend to go into extreme hyperfocus in certain areas," and that sometimes spelled doom when it came to schoolwork.
Paris may also finally have a love interest of her own -- she meets a boy in Washington, D.C., in the season premiere.
www.homunculus.com /articles/weilliza/weilzap2it020924.html   (731 words)

  
 Paris - Soak up café culture in chic Paris   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
An old Bastille stalwart, Chez Paul could be the archetype for the Paris bistro with its tiled floor, zinc bar, tightly packed tables and photocopied, handwritten menu of age-old favourites that never seems to change.
If anywhere could be said to epitomize the exuberant good health of the Paris bistro scene, it is this upscale eating-house at the wrong end of the 14th arrondissement.
The Paris Main d'Or, near the Bastille, is a boisterous haven for the most exotic and least familiar of all France's regional cuisines - the herby food of Corsica.
www.cntraveller.com /Guides/France/Paris/Default.aspx?Page=3   (5495 words)

  
 Searching for Sartre: an excerpt from We'll Always Have Paris: American Tourists in France since 1930 by Harvey ...
We'll Always Have Paris explores the love/hate relationship with French culture that flourished in the twentieth-century United States, often in the minds of the same people.
Paris was made the headquarters of the Economic Cooperation Administration (ECA), which ran the plan, and some three thousand Americans were sent over in the spring of 1948 to run it.
The young Americans arriving in Paris in 1948 almost inevitably gravitated there, turning it, said Janet Flanner, into “a campus for the American collegiate set.” Martha Churchill’s first impression of the district in September 1948 was that “a lot of the men have long beards, berets, and a generally arty look.
www.press.uchicago.edu /Misc/Chicago/473783.html   (5235 words)

  
 Rent a flat in Paris - home   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
I am pleased to propose to you apartments located always well in Paris, pleasant districts, and with complete equipment so that you can pass a pleasant stay to Paris.
The vacation rental in Paris is situated close to the Place de la République, and measures 26m² about...
Situated in a rustic paved street in the 10th arrondissement of Paris near the République, it is a beautiful Hausmann apartment of 45m2 on the 2nd floor in a building about...
www.apartmentparis.fr   (242 words)

  
 'We'll always have Paris' isn't just a Humphrey Bogart line | csmonitor.com
For this "narrative of time and place," the author charts the physical extension of the city from a small settlement on an island of the Seine to what was to become the center of the French nation - and the largest port in France by the 1830s.
Early in its history Paris came to play a major role as a center of learning, a development linked to the growth of the printing industry.
In fact, excessive detail is the main problem of this "biography of a city," as Jones subtitles his study, for, like many biographers, he has amassed an extensive amount of material and wants to share it with the reader.
www.csmonitor.com /2005/0607/p16s04-bogn.htm   (839 words)

  
 PacoVilla's CCPOA blog: We'll always have Paris...
Bob Paris [...who retired in December from the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation...] thought he was going to Tahoe for a bite of lunch Tuesday.
Paris, please ascertain if he would be offended by a token of Paco's esteem.
The Bob Paris in the story was confirmed by headquarters as indeed the same retired CDCR employee...way to go...and congratulations to you, Bob!
ccpoa.blogspot.com /2006/03/well-always-have-paris.html   (496 words)

  
 BookPage Nonfiction Review: I'll Always Have Paris!
After all, Paris was the fabled city of Gertrude Stein, Henry Miller, Ernest Hemingway, and all those other myth-makers who were then fueling undergraduate dreams of literary greatness.
Paris proved to be a wonderful place to observe human nature without having to involve oneself excessively in its grubbier dimensions.
Buchwald invaded postwar Paris with arms-open gusto, grandly indifferent to the fact that he could neither speak nor write in French.
www.bookpage.com /9609bp/nonfiction/illalwayshaveparis.html   (1171 words)

  
 Promotex Online - You'll always have Paris
For Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, Paris was a lovely memory spoiled by the invasion of the Germany Army.
Paris is the original home of the big automobile show.
Perhaps it's the city, but the Paris show is more of a celebration: a big party for car companies.
www.promotex.ca /articles/cawthon/2002/10-01-2002_article.html   (1332 words)

  
 Blogger: Email Post to a Friend
Everything was well packed and arranged and it was no sweat feeding her at all.
Sometimes, we let her sit on our laps as we eat, sometimes she is on the stroller playing and since we are sitting on the sofa type seats, towards the end of the meal, I let her sit next to me, lift up and straighten one of my leg to block her from falling.
Paris was a good girl and sat on their highchair.
www.blogger.com /email-post.g?blogID=8320262&postID=111327440060226959   (1140 words)

  
 We'll always have Paris John Baxter talks about sex and love in the City of Light - Paris Voice Magazine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Renowned film critic, biographer, and Paris resident John Baxter’s new book, “We’ll Always Have Paris: Sex and Love in the City of Light,” is a gushing love letter to his adoptive city.
Both an autobiography as well as an exploration of the French capital as a sexual and artistic center, “We’ll Always Have Paris” delves deeply into the seedy — and not so seedy, focusing on this town and its history of sexual liberty, institutional eroticism, and aristocratic deviants.
Born in Australia, Baxter is a first-rate globetrotter, having worked in the film industry in Sydney, as a broadcaster in London, and as a screenwriter in Hollywood before deciding to move to here.
parisvoice.com /?fuseaction=Article.Article&A=136&cat_id=43   (577 words)

  
 We'll always have Paris (to shop in)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
LIFE in Paris, as I had known it in recent years as a fashion editor, had come down to this: survival.
Gayla, it would appear, has only one rule for the tours she shepherds to Paris, which to her is not only the City of Light but also the capital of style.
On her many trips to Paris, she marveled at the French way of dressing, at the sophistication and charm with which these people put together their homes and tables -- the linens, flowers and silver, the foods and wines.
www.chron.com /content/chronicle/features/97/12/21/paris.html   (2708 words)

  
 Richard Delevan's sicNotes: We'll Always Have Paris
We had fun relaying the story when it first came out, about how Paris Hilton's mobile had been hacked and some bright spark for a laugh decided to post its contents -- naughty pics from the camera phone, emails, notes, and 500 mobile phone numbers and email addresses for her fellow parasitic celebs.
Their Laura Barton took the list - presumably grabbed before the whack-a-mole game the FBI and Secret Service were playing to shut down websites that were publishing the details - and rang all 510 numbers.
Now is the time for all good men to get their freakin' story straight.
richarddelevan.blogspot.com /2005/02/well-always-have-paris.html   (603 words)

  
 Column - Et Cetera . . . Will We Always Have Paris?
Every six years, when the European machine tool show rolls into Paris, there seems to be an undercurrent of grumbling that is usually expressed by questioning Paris as one of the three venues for the EMO shows.
Well, some people I spoke with explained that the French tend to shoot themselves in the foot with fairly consistent infrastructure disruptions every time the show hits Paris.
This was my first visit to Paris, and frankly, I expected to experience some of the stereotypical rudeness, arrogance and general disdain of Parisians toward foreigners such as myself.
www.mmsonline.com /columns/0799et.html   (435 words)

  
 :: Xinhuanet - English ::
PARIS, Oct. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- France will be always on the side of the Palestinian Authority leader Yasser Arafat, French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier declared Thursday.
According to one of Arafat's doctors, the 75-year-old Palestinian leader is suffering from a potentially fatal blood disorder which will require more tests to determine the cause outside the West Bank, where he has been kept under virtual house arrest for the last three years.
He was expected to arrive in Paris on Friday.
news.xinhuanet.com /english/2004-10/29/content_2151630.htm   (248 words)

  
 Amazon.com: We'll Always Have Paris : Sex and Love in the City of Light: Books: John Baxter   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Baxter loves to focus on Paris' erotic history, and he does a particularly stunning job of explicating Josephine Baker's electric effect on the French psyche, attributing to her nude dances a profound restructuring of French attitudes to sexuality.
Paris has lured many a visitor, pilgrim, and seeker to its world with promises of the good life and culture: here to chart it all is WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE PARIS: SEX AND LOVE IN THE CITY OF LIGHT.
We'll Always Have Paris is part auto-biography in telling the tale of how the author came from Australia and then LA to end up living in Paris.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0060832886?v=glance   (1384 words)

  
 Adactio: Journal - We'll always have Paris
Paris conveys that feeling of having centuries of history bound into every building and street in much the same way as London.
It was a culinary, as well as a cultural, trip.
The hotel was great (although it did have the world’s smallest lift), the weather was good and Paris was, well… Paris.
adactio.com /journal/792   (350 words)

  
 Zap2it - TV news - She'll Always Have Paris
Such a person is Paris Geller on The WB's "Gilmore Girls." She's hyper-competitive, obsessed with being first in everything and deeply neurotic.
But Weil and the "Gilmore Girls" writers also show that the way she behaves is a defense against her own uncertainty.
She starred in the 1998 independent movie "Whatever" and had a role in the 1999 Kevin Bacon thriller "Stir of Echoes." After moving to Los Angeles and landing guest spots on "ER" and "The West Wing," she won the role of Paris.
tv.zap2it.com /tveditorial/tve_main/1,1002,271|78190|1|,00.html   (748 words)

  
 AFM Presents: We'll Always Have Paris, by Steven L. Shrewsbury   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
From the caverns of Germany to the ruined streets of Paris, Stefan was as he was.
Always constant was Stefan—either warning them away from such habits or wading in the entrails of insects that measured two meters long.
Always a realist, Stefan comprehended his place in the darkened world.
www.apocalypsefiction.com /newfiction/paris.html   (1857 words)

  
 Tennis: Roddick, Federer, Ferrero always have Paris (printable version)
PARIS — Heading into the 2003 French Open, Andy Roddick, Roger Federer and Juan Carlos Ferrero were brimming with potential and had little to show for it.
That worked out well: Roddick reached the Wimbledon semifinals a few weeks later, then won the U.S. Open and ended the year ranked No. 1.
Agassi still dictates points as well as anyone, but he just turned 34 and lost his only match since March to a player ranked 339th.
www.rgj.com /news/printstory.php?id=71419   (990 words)

  
 Boston.com / News / Boston Globe / Living / Arts / Mr. Fussy will always have Paris
The flag carrier has wonderful food, monolingual pilots ("Soon we will be joining Paris"), and neatly turned out ground personnel who didn't bat an eyelash when Monsieur F inquired if he might be booked into either seat 21-A or 21-K. Those are window seats that...
The flag carrier has wonderful food, monolingual pilots ("Soon we will be joining Paris"), and neatly turned out ground personnel who didn't bat an eyelash when Monsieur F inquired if he might be booked into either seat 21-A or 21-K. Those are window seats that have expansioniste legroom in some Airbus configurations.
F was in Paris, a newly published book revealed that French president Jacques Chirac thought of invading Iraq with the United States and Britain -- but abandoned the idea when it didn't poll well.
www.boston.com /news/globe/living/articles/2004/11/02/mr_fussy_will_alwayshave_paris   (720 words)

  
 Guardian Unlimited | Special reports | We'll always have Paris
In Paris, they always seem to be dreaming up nice things for the people who live there.
Paris is deemed by those who take responsibility for it as a place worth loving.
Livingstone seems powerless to dream of, still less impose, a vision for London as creative as the one being devised for Paris; nor can he afford to come up with jaunty seasonal projects that may make Londoners feel public officials are keen to make their city a joy to live in.
www.guardian.co.uk /france/story/0,11882,884394,00.html   (864 words)

  
 Abbeys Bookshop - Well Always Have Paris: Sex and Love in the City of Light
Well Always Have Paris: Sex and Love in the City of Light
Most were tourists, but a significant number had other motives, ranging from learning to paint or write, to finding a rich husband; from escaping racism and politics to gaining a sexual education.
All of these people arrived because they were re-making their lives.WE'LL ALWAYS HAVE PARIS is a personal view of Paris as it appeared to the emotionally and intellectually hungry of the world.
www.abbeys.com.au /items.asp?id=309666   (237 words)

  
 Gilmore Girls - 4.10 - The Nanny and the Professor   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Paris Geller, whose interview with Professor Asher Fleming was the most intimate and revealing portrait of a complicated man that I have ever read.
JASON: Well, when you move a little to the left, you get the satisfaction of knowing you are doing something, but you are not pandering for a dog bone.
Well, you know she got that call, and her aunt is sick, and I heard her say something about going to the hospital so I think that's where she went.
m.1asphost.com /sweetgilmoregirls/Transkripte-englisch-4.10.htm   (5544 words)

  
 'We'll always have Paris': Hotel opens in other City of Lights, Las Vegas - Brief Article - Statistical Data Included ...
LAS VEGAS -- The recent opening of the Paris Las Vegas resort and hotel here, was ushered in by such legendary French entertainers as actress Catherine Deneuve and composer Michel Legrand, as well as an estimated 35,000 spectators.
LEYE founder and chairman Richard Melman said he had been approached by several resorts before choosing the Paris Las Vegas project, where the resort theme dovetailed with his passion for French cuisine.
BET founder Robert Johnson said the live-performance, jazz-inflected restaurant was a perfect fit for the resort, given the long association of fl jazz musicians, such as Josephine Baker, with Paris.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m3190/is_45_33/ai_57541367   (424 words)

  
 We'll always have Paris...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
I think we’re going to stay in Paris but I think we’re going to move north into the city.
A year in the life of one family living the dream in a world gone mad, watching their baby grow up against a backdrop of civil disorder and zombie apocalypse, with a 1000 elephants.
I think we’re going to stay in Paris but I think w...
www.trans-technical.com /thedayafter   (376 words)

  
 We'll Always Have Paris
Let's count the ways Cafe de Paris woos us: Once a month, owner Erik Rochard hosts a martini happy hour fueled with live jazz (he's the guy on the flute), and chef Damien O'Donnell offers cooking instruction in classes designed for both kids and adults.
But there's much more to praise than to pick apart at Cafe de Paris, where the snug seating and muted lighting foster an air of easy romance, and the beef bourguignon over pasta makes the drive from the big city worth the haul.
And mussels in a creamy coconut milk broth, whose richness is cut with pickled ginger, turns out to be one of those dishes that is as good for its sauce as for its star.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/11/AR2006011102033.html?nav=rss_artsandliving/foodanddining   (1393 words)

  
 SG-1 - We'll Always Have Paris
Amy had not always had the greatest self-image in the world, but she prided herself that even at her worst she had never been easy.
Well?" she demanded of the alley cat who sat watching her.
"Well that was a nasty thing to say," he seemed to accuse.
www.gateworld.net /fanfic/archive/15/wellalways.html   (1656 words)

  
 Television Without Pity: The Nanny And The Professor   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Rory says that Paris is seeing a Yale professor: "It's so weird." Lorelai isn't as upset with Rory for holding onto this information as I thought she'd be.
Lorelai says she can't believe Paris is doing an older man. Rory says that she didn't say Paris was "doing" him -- just that she was kissing him.
Rory says she will, because Paris was getting out her potter's wheel as Rory was leaving.
www.televisionwithoutpity.com /story.cgi?show=25&story=6062&page=5&sort=&limit=all   (573 words)

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