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        Known
            to Brazilians as "Cidade
        Maravilhosa" (The Wonderful City), Rio de Janeiro is always
        brimming with color, sound, rhythm, and joy, which make it synonymous
        with Carnival, happiness, and beautiful people. Very few places in the
        world match the hospitality and natural charm in which Rio is
        perpetually swathed. 
         
        Squeezed into a narrow, astonishingly lovely zone between
        rainforest-clad cliffs and the sea, in what many have called the world's
        most beautiful city setting, Rio de Janeiro pulses like an artery. The
        famed emeralds, amethysts, and rubies of Rio shops are just the
        beginning; all the colors of the world are here. The thousand shades of
        Amazon green, the deep black of a businessman's London- made suit, the
        lucid gold of afternoon sunlight, the gray of granite monoliths, the
        blue of a tropical sea, the hundred shades of tanned flesh. The primeval
        splendor of Rio's environs lends the city an eternal youth-the arrogant
        flamboyance that lets one dance too late and too seductively, talk to a
        stranger when you don't really speak the language, and wander the
        streets knowing you will end up some- where exciting. 
         
        That somewhere is usually near the beach: Rio's 45 miles of white sand
        beach encompass neighbor- hoods familiar the world over. Copacabana,
        Ipanema, and Leblon cuddle together like a clique of celebrities, each
        brilliantly different. Rio de Janeiro's diverse personalities often
        delight and astound, and never fail to fascinate, from the impeccable,
        beach-scarved Avenida Atlantica to the favelas which blanket the
        hillsides, to the cobblestone streets and artist-inhabited Victorian
        mansions of Santa Theresa. During the day, the beach-and-cafe culture
        nonchalantly transform the shoreline into the center of the city. At
        night, the clubs, restaurants, and dance halls, called forros, dominate.
        Part of the nightlife's charm is its spontaneity.  Be prepared to
        call ahead. 
         
        Rio is indisputably a city--with all the attendant traffic and bustle.
        But the life that inspires the Rio driver to make three lanes where
        there were only meant to be two also coaxes an impromptu samba from
        tired legs and drives that most renowned of all Rio events, Carnival.
        What color mother nature hasn't already supplied, the local Cariocas
        will invent. Nothing is spared for this festival of senses. 
        
        
          
          
                  
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