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In August Venus struck gold when he staged SI's first conference.
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Henk de Vries of Feadship built the Venus for Jobs, though he won't confirm that.
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She tells him to arrange a meeting with Iole, where Venus will use her powers to make sure he gets what he's after.
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He casts Evelyn as the more emotive Venus.
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Another reason is that Mr Brand came to the Getty only last August, which means he has no personal link to a dubious Venus or suspect Apollo.
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His strength is legendary, but when it comes to matters of love, he's... well, impotent. (Hercules is also without benefit of modern pharmacology.) He does, however, have the goddess Venus at his disposal, and she's anxious to help him with his love life.
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Collecting the rags from his studio, he heaped them in front of a statue of Venus, recasting the Roman goddess as a common washer-woman.
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In his 2009 book, Storms of my Grandchildren, he argues that the Earth could one day become like the planet Venus, where temperatures are warm enough to melt lead.
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As well-versed in his craft as he is, he saw a new gear when going over the script of "Venus in Fur" with director Roman Polanski, who is making a film from the play.
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On his most recent trip, he stopped in Shenzhen to confirm that he had lined up nearly every major Chinese computer manufacturer behind his company's "Venus project, " a combination of software and hardware that lets VCD players and other, similar devices display Chinese-language Internet content on an ordinary TV set.
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He argues that radar astronomy, which is used to probe things like asteroids and the surface of Venus, already gives off signals that could be picked up by aliens.
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