Magazine merges news of travel, food, home



Magazine merges newsof travel, food, home
A new magazine that includes travel as one of its key components has hit the stands.
Intermezzo is its name, and it features articles on travel, fine food, wine, and home-related topics, all under the premise that its audience needs a slick umbrella publication because it doesn't have time to read separate magazines on each of those topics.
Among the premiere issue's travel articles are "One Amazing Street in London," "Flavors of Tuscany: A Cooking School Vacation" and "South African Wine Tour."
A charter subscription is $19 for six issues.
For details, visit www.intermezzomagazine.com on the Web or call (781) 665-7717.
Winslow Homer show
At San Francisco's California Palace of the Legion of Honor museum is an exhibition of 65 watercolors and other paintings by Winslow Homer devoted to his lifelong passion -- fly fishing.
The show closes Feb. 9 at the museum, located at 75 Tea Garden Drive in Golden Gate Park.
For more information, call (415) 863-3330 or visit www.thinker.org on the Web.
Exhibit shows footageof storm from WTC
New Mexico's SITE Santa Fe is showing through Jan. 5 three unique video projections called "Monika Bravo: Playing with Time" -- much of it derived from seven hours of time-lapse footage of "an unusual thunderstorm" the Colombian-born artist filmed and took home from her studio in the north tower of the World Trade Center on Sept. 10, 2001. The building was destroyed in a terrorist attack the next day.
SITE Santa Fe is at 1606 Paseo de Peralta.
For more information, call (505) 989-1199 or visit www.sitesantafe.org on the Web.
Cruise line postponesship's maiden voyage
Princess Cruises canceled the inaugural sailing of its ship Coral Princess because of delays at the Chantiers de l'Atlantique shipyard in France. A Tuesday sailing, a 10-day round-trip Panama Canal cruise starting in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., will become its first voyage.
The line plans to christen the ship Jan. 17 at the canal's Gatun Locks, with Mireya Moscoso, the president of Panama, doing the honors.
The cruise line said passengers scheduled for the canceled cruise would receive a full refund and a $500-per-cabin credit for a future trip.
The 88,000-ton ship can carry 1,970 passengers.
After a winter in southern waters, it will start Alaska cruises in May, based in Vancouver.