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TITLE: New York Magazine
[The Magazine of and for New Yorkers! -- See FULL contents below!]
ISSUE DATE: JULY 28, 2003 VOL. 36, NO. 25
CONDITION: Standard sized magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date. ] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

COVER: 100 Great Chearp Meals. On The Cover: Photographed By Erica Mcconnell.

FEATURES:
There Are So Many Great, Inexpensive Meals To Be Had At The Moment, Picking Our Favorite New Ones Was No Easy Task, But It 99 Was A Delicious One. --Robin Raisfeld And Rob Patronite, Page 20 Cheap Eats BY ROBIN RAISFELD AND ROB PATRONITE In the culinary landscape of the city, new restaurants pop up overnight. We present our favorites of the latest crop--from perfect panini on Wall Street to $2 tamales on the Slope to Ober-fresh seviche in Queens.

Look By juxtaposing known objects in provocative ways--say, a baby carriage and a Klan hood--Fred Wilson rattles our perceptions of the familiar. As America's representative to the Venice Biennale, he's turned heads and inflamed critics.

Losing Her Religion BY CRAIG HOROWITZ Chayie Sieger was a dutiful Hasidic wife and mot her in Borough Park until she left her husband of 24 years, accusing him of adultery and battery. But when a rabbinical court issued a harsh ruling in his favor, she fought back, accusing the rabbis of taking bribes and her community of abandoning her.

THE WEEK:
"I was very demanding," says Angelina Jolie. She's talking about both Tomb Raider film, in which she returns to play the bodacious archaeologist heroine, and her--how to put this?--much-discussed divorce from Billy Bob Thornton. The latter will be endlessly dissected in the tabloids; the former hits theaters on July 25. (See our chat with Jolie, page 56.).

THEATER SWIM SHORTS II (WETTER AND WILDER) The Word of Mouth theater company stages its latest production in the 57th Street Holiday Inn's pool. (Starts July 23; see highlight, page 65.).

RESTAURANTS PENELOPE Lower Lexington Avenue moves beyond chicken tikka masala with this friendly new cafe. (See highlight, page 67.).

ART FROM EXPRESSIONISM TO BAUHAUS The best of MoMAs German art and design collection comes out of storage and into the Neue Galerie. (See highlight, page 77.).

MUSIC & DANCE MOSTLY MOZART A new conductor, beloved by the fractious orchestra, steps in to run the festival--and he's got big plans. (Starts July 24; see highlight and listings, page 79.).

NIGHTLIFE ROXY MUSIC The celebrated seventies band, now on a reunion tour, walks audiences through its many reincarnations. (July 25 and 26; see interview with Bryan Ferry, page 80.).

THE MIX BUILT INADAY A New York computer executive turned author paints a not terribly flattering portrait of a slacker. (See interview, page 82.).

KIDS SUMMER SCIENCE ADVENTURES AT THE BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN 'Three-day classes teach city kids a little about life away from the pavement. (See highlight, page 85.).

The Hamptons gay-beach crackdown . . . Kate Beckinsale's meltdown . . . an NBC-ABC showdown.
I'M RIGHT, YOU'RE WRONG: Ed Koch, Al D'Amato, and Mark Green wrestle over whether the president lied on WMDs.
COLUMNISTS.
THIS MEDIA LIFE BY MICHAEL WOLFF Bill Keller's belated ascension to the executive-editor slot at the New York Times quells the newsroom rebellion--but labor choosing management doesn't bode well for the top brass.
THE CITY POLITIC BY MICHAEL TOMASKY A modest proposal for how belea- guered Mayor Bloomberg can turn things around.
SALES & BARGAINS Bag sales, bathing-suit sales, and even one "Crazy Sale.
TRAVEL BY TARA MANDY Summering in coastal Maine.
SMART CITY 41 BEST OF NEW YORK Loose and simply wrapped, farm-style bouquets have never looked so fresh.
BEST BETS BY RIMA SUQI From illuminated sculpture to the season's must-have sneakers, the week's most-wanted gear.
NEW YORK SHOPS Sexy, slouchy, to-be-sandy beach bags.
CRITICS.
MOVIES BY PETER RAINER Camp is high on spirit but low on surprises; Bad Boys II delivers all action, all the time.
THEATER BY JOHN SIMON Liev Schreiber channels Henry Vin Central Park; The Angel Project is an exercise in pretension.
CLASSICAL MUSIC BY PETER G. DAVIS The high point of the Kirov Opera's stand at the Lincoln Center Festival was an absorbing Khovanshchina.
TELEVISION BY JOHN LEONARD Plastic surgeons go wild in FX's Nip/Tuck; MI-5 ramps the Brit.
DANCE BY LAURA SHAPIRO Exuberant dancing saves an inconsistent St. Louis Woman at the Dance Theatre of Harlem.
THE WEEK 56A guide to the city's best culture and restaurants.
CLASSIFIEDS/PERSONALS/ REAL ESTATE.
NAKED CITY BY AMY SOHN He finally popped the question. So why can't she just say yes?.
STRICTLYPERSONAL.COM.
NEW YORK CROSSWORD BY MAURA B. JACOBSON.


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