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...rest of the contest, the Crimson kept the ball on the Dartmouth side, and had a number of good scoring opportunities. And when Dartmouth did get an offensive rush, junior goalie Anne Browning came through with save after save, tallying 11 for the day, including a breath-taking diving stop in the 67th minute that drew loud cheers from the crowd...

Author: By Nicholas D. Zeitlin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: NCAA Bid at Stake For W. Soccer vs. Brown | 11/6/1998 | See Source »

...Washington correspondent Jay Branegan, "and it appears they have." Voters sent a strong message to Washington to back off on impeachment -- in exit polls, 61 percent disapproved of the Republicans' handling of the presidential scandal -- but that doesn't mean President Clinton is off the hook: "After a deep breath of one or two days the Washington establishment will again be baying at the moon of impeachment," says Branegan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GOP Drops the Ball | 11/4/1998 | See Source »

...news: T-20 has to be injected, not swallowed as a pill, which suggests the drug gets destroyed by the stomach. "That?s not going to be very convenient," warns Gorman. We?ll find out more in the next round of testing -- but don?t hold your breath for the cure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Another AIDS Breakthrough -- Maybe | 11/3/1998 | See Source »

...presidential election. Elsewhere, it seems, the religious conservative base of the Republican party was simply not motivated enough to turn out in the same kind of numbers that made 1994 such a watershed. Does that mean President Clinton is off the hook? Not according to Branegan. "After a deep breath of one or two days," he says, "the Washington establishment will again be baying at the moon of impeachment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dems Turn the Tide | 11/3/1998 | See Source »

...only rehearsed in my head, but it was as wonderful to hear lines from his new translation of Beowulf. His wry running commentary--that the genre demanded the heroic "Charlton Heston or Clint Eastwood bit" or that he pictured the monster Grendel as a sort of "reeking dog-breath in the dark"--helped to underscore that Heaney was coming at the old staple of high school English classes from a refreshing new angle...

Author: By Jia-rui Chong, | Title: Who Owns Beowulf? | 11/2/1998 | See Source »

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