A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament, a worldwide pheno
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A prep course for the month-long World Cup soccer tournament , a worldwide pheno menon to be played in the United States for the first time beginning June 17 , i s available in a set of three home videos . Each of the three volumes by PolyGra m Video lists for $ 14.95 and has a running time of about 60 minutes . The three volumes : `` World Cup USA '94 : The Official Preview , '' which includes a tou rnament history with footage all the way back to the first World Cup held in 193 0 . There 's a look at the training of the 1994 U.S. team and a profile of Brazi l 's Pele , just 17 when he took the 1958 event by storm , repeating in 1962 and 1970 . `` Top 50 Great World Cup Goals , '' highlighting exciting moments from competition beginning in 1966 with favorites such as Pele , Johan Cruyff , Diego Maradona , Roberto Baggio , Salvatore `` Toto '' Schillaci and Franz Beckenbaue r . `` Great World Cup Superstars , '' focusing on the top names in the game , f eatured in the `` Goals '' cassette , and adding some interviews that offer an i nsight into what makes these stars shine . Three new basketball videos available : `` Sir Charles '' takes a look at the on-court intensity and dynamic skills o f Charles Barkley of the Phoenix Suns as well as his entertaining off-court pers ona. $ 19.98 , 50 minutes , 1-800-999-VIDEO . `` NBA Superstars 3 '' follows up on two previous hit videos meshing the moves of the NBA 's elite with today 's h it music . This one includes Kenny Anderson , Steve Smith , Derrick Coleman , La rry Johnson , Dan Majerle , Alonzo Mourning , Hakeem Olajuwon , Mark Price , Sha wn Kemp , Isiah Thomas and Joe Dumars . Their play is matched with the music of Erick Sermon , M People , LL Cool J , Celine Dion , Domino , Soulhat , Soul Asyl um , Buckshot LeFonque , Branford Marsalis , Pearl Jam and Rozella. $ 19.98 , 50 minutes , 1-800-999-VIDEO . `` Hog Wild : The Official 1994 NCAA Championship V ideo '' recaptures the excitement of the latest edition of March Madness and Ark ansas 's march to the title with rousing victories over Michigan , Arizona and D uke in the three final games. $ 19.98 , 45 minutes , 1-800-747-7999 . Canadian River Expeditions offers a change from the usual theme-park vacation : five 11-day float trips from July 1 to Aug. 31 that take families through some of British Columbia 's most scenic territory . Travel for these Chilcotin-Fraser tours is by yacht , seaplane and raft through deep fjords where bald eagles whe el through the sky and the water is filled with seals , whales and some of the b iggest salmon in the world . Highlights include winging on a seaplane over icefi elds , hiking trips and fishing expeditions . The raft rides are not white knuck le adventures it 's mostly gentle floating . A few hours a day are spent on the water , with the rest of the time devoted to guided sightseeing and nature walks . Price is $ 2,325 , including round-trip airfare to Vancouver , meals and acco mmodations , as well as camping gear . Call your travel agent or ( 604 ) 738-444 9 . Trafalgar Tours is offering 16 `` Best of ... '' trips to Europe for 1994 . `` Best of Britain , '' for example , takes in all of England and Scotland in 15 days for $ 1,099 . A 14-day `` Best of France '' trip for $ 1,260 covers the co untry from north to south , including Monaco , and a `` Best of Switzerland '' i tinerary combines Zurich , St. Moritz , Zermatt , Geneva , Interlaken and Lucern e in 9 nine days for $ 799 . Other packages are available for Spain , Italy , Ge rmany , Austria , Holland , Norway , Sweden and Denmark , Belgium and Holland , among others . Prices exclude airfare . Call your travel agent or ( 800 ) 457-68 91 . Airlines are offering , or continuing , special price packages for traveler s flying to Europe , the Mideast and the Far East . IPI World Travel and Delta A irlines , for example , are rolling back prices for a `` China Highlights '' tou r 14 days , departing in November and December , to Bejing , Shanghai , Xian Gui lin and Hong Kong for $ 2,650 , including airfare from the East Coast . Delta al so runs several package tours to European cities : a `` Parisien Spree '' of 6 s ix nights , breakfasts and a Seine River cruise , for $ 1,199 per person , doubl e occupancy , round-trip from New York , and a `` Romantic Rome '' trip , with s imilar features , for just $ 1,289 . El Al meanwhile sponsors a spring vacation package that includes five nights ' accommodations in Tel Aviv , daily breakfast s and free rental car , for just $ 1,049 round-trip from New York City . Call yo ur travel agent or IPI at ( 212 ) 953-6010 or El Al Israeli Airlines at ( 800 ) EL AL SUN . Take a long weekend this summer and enjoy one of several two- to fou r-day walking tours of New York 's historic Hudson Valley from High Land Flings Footloose Holidays . Their `` Dutch Treat '' trip , June 3-5 , follows in the fo otsteps of colonial settlers through three National Historic landmark villages w here stone houses built by Dutch and Huguenot builders in the 17th century still stand . You 'll walk America 's oldest street in New Paltz , Main Street in Hur ley and the Stockade area of Kingston , where the state 's constitution was writ ten and adopted , and also visit the 1676 Senate House . Other walks cover the a rea of Lake Minnewaska , Overlook Mountain near Woodstock and the northeastern C atskills . Prices range from $ 350 per person , double occupancy , for two-day w alks to $ 699 for a four-day trip . Call ( 800 ) 453-6665 . Are frequent-flier awards worth all the trouble travelers sometimes go through to rack up enough miles for a free trip ? Not according to a lengthy piece in th e May issue of Worth magazine , which concludes that the programs are vastly ove r-rated . Then why do so many banks , rental-car companies , long-distance phone services and hotels reward their frequent customers with airline miles rather t han cash discounts or other perks ? Simple , says Worth contributing editor Jeff Blyskal , in the article entitled `` The Frequent-Flier Fallacy . '' Companies want to give premiums that combine the greatest perceived value with the lowest possible outlay , and frequent-flier miles are the perfect solution . Each freeb ie ticket costs an airline only $ 11 to $ 42 , Blyskal calculates . The average discount to passengers amounts to 3.3 percent almost 2 percent less than you get by being a valued customer of Sears , he writes . His data showed the cost to a traveler for each award ranges from $ 929 with Southwest Airlines to $ 7,527 wi th Delta , which requires higher-than-average mileage minimums to collect a free bie . The dollar value of the freebies ranges from $ 56 with Southwest to $ 208 with United . The effective discounts passengers reap range from 1.5 percent ( U SAir ) to 6 percent ( Southwest ) . Hotel frequent-guest programs typically prov ide a 5 percent discount , as do numerous retailers ' programs , including Sears Best Customer , Blyskal found . The number of dollars spent to earn a domestic freebie usually available after flying 20,000 miles typically ranges from $ 3,62 6 to $ 6,555 , he said . ( On Southwest Airlines , the average passenger gets a free trip after 7,104 miles because freebies are awarded by that carrier after e ight round trips rather than a mileage minimum . ) Blyskal says his accounting s ystem gives airlines the benefit of the doubt in every aspect and was based on t he programs as they stand now before the program devaluations most airlines plan starting next year . The payback is even worse from affinity credit cards , he says , which generally award one frequent-flier mile per dollar charged . This t ranslates to an effective discount of just 0.7 percent on $ 20,000 in credit car d spending needed to earn the $ 152 in value of the average free ticket , Blyska l figures . All in all , he says , to earn these paltry awards , travelers spend more on air travel in the first place than they have to because they often shun low-cost airlines that do not participate in frequent-flier programs . For exam ple , he says , to earn 20,000 miles on United , a traveler would have to make 1 4 Newark-Chicago round trips at a cost of $ 12,348 . Fourteen round trips would cost just a quarter of that $ 2,912 on upstart Kiwi International Airlines , whi ch offers consistently low rates but no frequent-flier perks , he says . You say you don't care about the price because your boss pays for a lot of your flights and lets you rake in the resulting frequent-flier perks ? Don't let the company bean-counters get wind of the fact that you could be sent on 45 more Newark-Chi cago business trips for what it 's costing to ensure that you get your perk , Bl yskal cautions . Add on the annual fees charged for some affinity cards , not to mention high interest on purchases and maybe a computer program to help you man age your miles . And , of course , most travelers who earn a freebie purchase a ticket for their spouse or companion to accompany them which often isn't availab le at any discount whatsoever . Plus the hardest cost to quantify which may be t he biggest cost of all , Blyskal says : the time many fliers spend obsessing ove r maximizing mileage for minimum payback . His advice ? Focus on service and low fares , not a possible freebie you may never collect . The State Department is taking a wait-and-see attitude after an American touris t was seriously injured in an attack May 10 by a man with a machete on a remote stretch of beach in the Cayman Islands . The State Department issues information about petty street crime , but not violence , in the Caribbean islands it group s as the British West Indies . `` We 're looking at whether this remains an isol ated incidence or if it 's an indication of a threat to other tourists , '' said Gary Sheaffer , department spokesman . At the opposite end of the Caribbean , o n the island of Trinidad off the coast of Venezuela , a honeymooning Canadian co uple was found beaten and dead on a beach May 11 , with their valuables nearby i n their unlocked rental car , a Canadian government spokeswoman confirmed . Trin idadian and Canadian police are still investigating , she said . `` This is the first time this has happened to Canadians in Trinidad . It 's probably a good id ea not to frequent deserted beaches , whether it 's Trinidad or Florida , '' sai d Lely Campbell-Ferreira . Sheaffer said the U.S. . State Department was not awa re of the incident . Now you have legroom , now you don't . TWA , which created its much-advertised Comfort Class in coach last year by taking 40 seats out of i ts cabins , is putting 34 seats back in planes flying its most popular routes th is summer . The airline is re-installing the seats on only 10 planes ( the 747-1 00s ) out of its fleet of 189 `` to meet high market demand '' for the summer , mostly on overseas flights , said spokesman Don Fleming . The rest of the fleet will retain Comfort Class . And TWA will re-evaluate seating in the fall and cou ld very well take the seats out again . Most of the flights with more legs and l ess room this summer fly out of New York : to Athens , Rome , Madrid , Milan , P aris , New York to St. Louis to Honolulu , one flight daily from New York to Los Angeles and St. Louis to Gatwick , London . Ask about Comfort Class before maki ng a reservation . Buzzwords that Cunard honchos recently bandied about as they described the upcoming $ 45 million refurbishment of the cruise line 's flagship , the Queen Elizabeth 2 , which made its maiden transatlantic voyage in 1969 , were `` enhance '' and `` flow . '' Which translates into opening up more spaces all over the ship : adding a second-story deck promenade to give the Midship Lo bby an atriumlike look , eliminating the odd dead-end corridor , redesigning the directional signs ( all `` to enhance passenger flow '' ) and adding a new obse rvation lounge at the rear of the ship with panoramic windows yielding an uninte rrupted view . The new art-deco- , neo-classical-inspired decor will be ripe wit h texture , replete with marble , resounding in architectural detail and rich in earthtones , all `` enhanced '' with the QE2 's memorabilia , such as old chart s and lots of regal art . All 900 cabins will be refurbished and all bathrooms r ebuilt . Ditto on restaurants , where quality of service will , of course , be ` ` enhanced . '' The refurbishment will commence Nov. 30 and take about 30 days , Cunard officials said . So will all this `` enhance '' prices ? `` The cost of cruising has never gone down , '' noted Navin Sawnhey , senior vice president of marketing . The QE2 now offers a range of fares and cruises , with its transatl antic voyage priced from $ 1,395 to $ 10,745 , per person , double , with return air travel . You can't party all night long in Greece anymore . Nightclubs , ba rs and restaurants formerly with all-night entertainment now must close by 2:30 a.m. in summer , 2 a.m. in winter and 3:30 a.m. on Saturday . So you willn't be sleepless in Seattle , the Seattle-King County Visitors Bureau is operating a fr ee reservation service : ( 800 ) 535-7071 . A new service offers travelers a fax mailbox to retrieve stored faxes with any machine by calling a toll-free number in the United States . For rate info , call AlphaNet Telecom at ( 212 ) 932-155 4 .
I think there are several reasons why , in polite company , we rarely talk abou t our discharges . I mention this in connection with endorphins , which , I noti ce , people have begun to discuss with relative strangers , just the way people formerly discussed their cholesterol at parties . Do you remember that ? Outward ly normal person : `` Do you know what my cholesterol was last week ? Myself : ` ` Sir , I do not . '' Outwardly normal person : `` It was ( mentions very good c holesterol count ) . '' Myself : `` That is good . '' Outwardly normal person : `` What , you don't believe me ? '' Myself : `` I say no such thing . '' Outward ly normal person : `` If there 's a problem here , I know a medical lab that 's open until 8 . We 'll take my Q45 and I 'll get re-tested and you can see exactl y what my cholesterol is . '' I was never sure about how to participate in these conversations , because , first of all , I would never say `` my cholesterol . '' My creed is that cholesterol belongs to the universe or the Great Spirit . We 're just borrowing it for a little while . Which raises a question : Let 's say you do get your cholesterol down . Where does it go ? Is it just out there , st icking to the faces of babies in perambulators and gumming up the wings of the g reat-crested kingfisher ? Now it is endorphins . Endorphins are a sore subject w ith me , because I 'm pretty sure I don't have any . Other people do , and somet imes they seem to be bragging about them . `` I was up on the Nordic Combat mach ine last night , and I had it set at level eight , which simulates hand-to-hand combat with a huge , grunting , mead-addled Hun . Boy , after 45 minutes , those endorphins were really flowing . '' The idea is that endorphins are chemicals t hat , under certain circumstances , begin squirting out of somewhere inside your head and making your brain feel better . I picture the system as comparable to those nozzles in highly evolved produce sections , where a soothing mist sighs o ut over the kale and the arugula , like the strange fogs that gather ' round Ben Bulben 's bare head . I have been known to tarry there for extra moments , watc hing the wet shades and phantoms dance over the ruby swiss chard . Endorphins ar e supposed to calm the mind and kill pain and produce peak experiences , such as the `` runner 's high . '' I have never had a runner 's high or a swimmer 's hi gh or any particular reaction to strenuous exercise except the keen sense of how exhausted I was and how eager I was to stop swimming or running . And I know fu ll well that my brain is a tightly wired network of fright sensors , discomfort gauges and humming monitors of self-concern . There is nothing up there that coa ts my fevered mind in soothing syrup , and even if there were it would just shor t everything out . So maybe I don't have endorphins , but even if I did , would I mention them ? My normal assumption is that there is no widespread appetite fo r information about my secretions . `` My gall bladder was on the job yesterday afternoon . I was pumping some big-time bile , emulsifying those fats in my duod enum . Bless my soul . '' To the endorphin-proud , I am often tempted to point o ut that one theory about endorphins is that they were originally bestowed upon a nimals , such as cats , for whom sex is excruciatingly painful . They were a lit tle payoff , nature 's way of saying , `` Thanks for perpetuating the species ev en though that felt like being probed by a briar patch . '' Under those circumst ances , I maintain that the civilized course is to live with pain and terror . I f things get intolerable , there 's always the option of scootching the chicory aside and lying down for a while next to the red leaf lettuce . By conventional wisdom , there are certain things you simply don't do , right ? You don't drink on an empty stomach . You don't spit into the wind and , of cou rse , you never escort the bride 's father to the bachelor party . But for paren ts of young children , one don't has always outdistanced all the rest . You don' t go to Disney World during school holidays . People who have disobeyed this com mandment litter Orlando like lost souls , their hollow eyes bespeaking the drubb ing they have taken at the Tourist Capital of the Universe . Their children drag behind , in tears , muttering , `` We 'll be good now , Daddy . We promise . Pl ease. Can we wait two more hours on another line ? '' School holidays at Disney World are crowded with a capital C , chaos with , well , a capital K . The lines are legendary , the sun is hot and the living uneasy . But I did it . I survive d . I even had a good time , and you can , too even if you visit at a peak perio d , such as the three summer months . All you have to do is follow some simple a dvice , which I 'm sharing on the condition that you don't go blabbing it to all the neighbors . Because the secret here is to go where they ISn't and , believe you me , at Disney , an incautious word about an empty attraction can turn the Road Less Traveled into a Superhighway faster than you can say Jiminy Cricket . Rule No. 1 , then , is plan ahead . This trite little maxim will seem biblical i n depth when you 've watched The Unprepared spin out of control like weather van es in the wind . I myself had envisioned being a bit laid back about the whole a ffair until I mentioned my vacation to a few friends : `` I 'm planning on bring ing the wife and my 5-year-old daughter down to Disney World this Easter . '' Th ey looked at me as if I were a few sandwiches short of a picnic . That 's when I finally realized that you don't approach Disney World like a visit to an amusem ent park . You approach it like the invasion of a small country . Think of it as the Duchy of Grand Fenwick and begin preparing your counterattack on the Mouse That Roared . Of course , if you are a Zen master , and view crowds as a natural event , like waves in the ocean , skip ahead to Tip No. 2 . But the rest of you , buy a guide book and start reading . Otherwise you will be trampled by those who know that you have to be at Dumbo by 10 a.m. to avoid an hour 's wait . If y ou don't believe me , listen to Bob Sehingler , whose guide to Disneyland I mana ge to find and use . `` It 's easy to spot the free spirits at Disneyland , '' h e wrote , `` particularly at opening time . While everybody else is stampeding t o Splash Mountain or Star Tours , they are the ones standing in a cloud of dust puzzling over the park map . Later , they are the people running around like chi ckens in a thunderstorm trying to find an attraction with less than a forty-minu te wait . '' Convinced ? Then make sure you abide by Rule No.2 . Get up early . How early ? Sick early . Dawn is too late at Disney World . One morning our wake -up call at the Grand Floridian , a Disney hotel , came at 5:45 a.m. . The hotel operator couldn't help laughing at me . It was pitch black outside . The drunks still hadn't gotten home . But you know what ? There were plenty of people ahea d of us when we boarded the monorail for the Magic Kingdom at 6:30 a.m. , taking advantage of a 90-minute early opening for Disney Resort guests . ( Begin optio nal trim ) Up Main Street we streamed , past street lamps still lit from the nig ht before . Everyone tried so hard to pretend they weren't running . It looked l ike a huge trial heat for the Olympic walking team . All that paranoia paid off , however . In the next hour we were able to board four or five rides that had b een swamped the previous afternoon . One hour after the parks open to the genera l public , major attractions have major lines . At Space Mountain , Splash Mount ain and Thunder Mountain Railroad in the Magic Kingdom , Spaceship Earth in Epco t and Star Tours at MGM , you can expect a line of at least half an hour . At Du mbo , forget it . This dinky little ride featuring that darling little elephant draws children like flies . I waited 45 minutes one day for a 45-second ride . I f you have to ride rides in the afternoon , try to do so during parade times , w hen lines go from maddening to manageable . ( End optional trim ) To make the tr ip back to the hotel as painless as possible , however , remember Rule No. 3 . S tay as close as possible to the parks . This can seem silly when the Budgetbear Hotel 10 miles away is offering Hoedown Weekend at five bucks a night . Believe me , that will not seem like a bargain for long . After becoming disgusted at th e honky tonk sprawl that sprung up around Disneyland , Father Disney decreed it Download 9.93 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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