In Theaters 'Breaking and Entering' In Anthony Minghella's "Breaking and Entering," multiple crimes are committed against numerous people, but not all are prosecutable in a court of law. Those subtle crimes are the heart and soul of this often beautiful film that examines the way choices we make can have disastrous results we never anticipated.
Waldo Pizza 7433 Broadway Road "Wouldn't you like to get away?/Sometimes you want to go where everybody knows your name." These memorable words from the "Cheers" theme song intone a wonderful picture of a warmly lit bar with comforting food and good friends.
After heavily exploring the diverse blues genre in the past three months or so, I found myself taking a peer-suggested journey. After going through just about every "mainstream" name in the book, it was the random selection of Hound Dog Taylor that resonated most deeply.
Death crawled into every nook and cranny of the pieces in "New Letters." "We know we have achieved the level of art when such visions of difficulties find balance with another truth, one just as tough," wrote Robert Stewart in the editor's note. "New Letters" is a quarterly publication that features short stories, poetry, reviews and essays.
Credit cards and cocaine have a lot in common. "Both are readily available and seem cheap at first," said Liz Pulliam Weston of MSN Money. "But both can lead to a spiral of financial devastation and emotional despair." Where do credit-card users draw the line between need and frivolous spending? "Unlike cocaine, though, credit is pretty much a necessity in the modern world," she said.