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100 Stories on Hobbies and Pastimes
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Time.com: Google Gets into Video Games -- with Ads

Google Inc., the leader in online search and advertising, is muscling in on video game territory -- though it won't exactly be in the form of a shoot 'em up game

Birds abandon Ike's devastation, leaving silence

One of North America's renowned bird migration and birdwatching areas is strangely silent.

Time.com: Beaches Once Thick with Birds Quiet Thanks to Ike

One of North America's renowned bird migration and bird watching areas is strangely silent. Blame Hurricane Ike

Time.com: Survey: Nearly Every Kid a Video Gamer

Katherine Graden doesn't really like shoot-'em-up video games. She prefers games on her Wii system that test her fitness and agility --the ones her guy friends tease are her "sissy games."

Survey: 97 percent of American youth play video games

Katherine Graden doesn't really like shoot-'em-up video games. She prefers games on her Wii system that test her fitness and agility -- the ones her guy friends tease are her "sissy games."

The future of gaming is all in the mind

Be excited, but be scared. A world of mind-blowing possibilities is suddenly being thrust upon the world of video gaming.

Fortune: The rise and fall of Jimmy Cayne

In the early morning hours last Sept. 11, a black Town Car pulled up to the entrance of New York-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan. Inside the sedan Jimmy Cayne, the CEO of Bear Stearns, was close to death. At dawn Cayne's wife had placed an emergency call to his physician, Dr. Jay Meltzer, and when Meltzer arrived at the couple's Park Avenue apartment, Cayne, then 73, was drowsy and desperately weak and had no appetite. His blood pressure was dangerously low. He was breathing very rapidly and deeply. Meltzer suspected sepsis. Rather than call an ambulance, Cayne asked for a car, in part because he feared that a public disclosure about his health could further damage the firm - a firm whose stock price had already dropped close to 27% (from $143 to $105 a share) since two of its highly leveraged hedge funds had imploded in June.

Fortune: Calling master chief

After making a ton of money in the advertising business, Michael Sepso and Sundance DiGiovanni decided six years ago that it was time to goof off. How did these two guys, then in their late 20s, pass the time? They played a lot of "Halo."

Cards could help uncover cold case clues

While inmates in jails across New York pass the time by playing card games -- poker, gin rummy and solitaire -- they may also be helping crack cold cases.

Time.com: Should Chess Be an Olympic Sport?

For over a decade, chess and bridge enthusiasts have lobbied the IOC to allow them to compete in the Games. Will they ever succeed?

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