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...upset in the first round that ensnares our attention (most recently Santa Clara over Arizona). Or the 11th seed which sneaks into the Final Four (like LSU in 1986). Or even the sixth seed that wins it all (like Kansas...

Author: By Darren Kilfara, | Title: March Greatness | 3/15/1994 | See Source »

...Proxy. Most important, he and Sturges, ever the sentimental wise guy, were at heart children of the light. The Coens (Joel directs, Ethan produces and they write together, this time with Sam Raimi) are creatures of darkness. At their best (the great Miller's Crossing or the dizzy Raising Arizona) they are brilliant satirists of the national propensity for violence. But here they have deliberately cut themselves off from their best subject. Try as they will to create a vision of corporate (and urban) hellishness through sheer stylishness, theirs is a truly abstract expressionism, at once heavy, lifeless...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: Half-Baked in Corporate Hell | 3/14/1994 | See Source »

...tournament winner gets an automatic bid to the Big Dance as the Midwest Region's #16 seed, but as Wisconsin Western Coach Don "Lampshade" Williams told me Monday, "We demand an equal shot. Ship us out West where we might have a shot at a first-round win against Arizona--I'm sick of this Big Ten crap every year...

Author: By Darren Kilfara, | Title: Championship Weak | 3/9/1994 | See Source »

Selig, who was contacted yesterday in Arizona,said Coleman has been a pioneer during the pasttwo years in taking baseball to minoritycommunities and in getting baseball involved incharity...

Author: By Terry H. Lanson, | Title: Harvard Grad Assumes National League Post | 3/9/1994 | See Source »

That sounded like hyperbole, but none of the committee members were surprised. Even the head of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dennis DeConcini, who says he likes Woolsey better than any of his predecessors, finds him "so damn hardheaded" about the budget. The Arizona Democrat does not believe that Woolsey, a savvy Washington lawyer and defense expert, has overlooked the reduction in the Soviet threat. Rather, he suspects that Woolsey's scrappy toughness on the intelligence budget is a move to rally the agency's spies, who tend to resent outsiders, behind his leadership and the changes he has to make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Company in Question | 3/7/1994 | See Source »

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