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...revered by government leaders and CEOs around the globe fall so far, so fast? Multiple investigations continue, and criminal charges have not been ruled out. Greenberg, who on advice from his attorneys declined to comment, has denied any fraudulent conduct and vowed to fight for his name. Months ago, he famously derided regulators' concerns as inconsequential "foot faults." Say this about him: he's never lacked for confidence. It's said that he once hopped into his limo after a board meeting and, when the driver asked where to go, responded, "Take me anywhere--everybody needs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Down...But Not Out | 6/13/2005 | See Source »

...giant of cricket, Glenn McGrath does a fair impression of a regular guy. Hanging about in the members' area of the Sydney Cricket Ground on a chilly afternoon last month, the fast bowler might have kept chatting with New South Wales State of Origin rugby league players, who happen to be milling about, too. But his attentions turn to the reporter, whom he knows a little. He agrees to talk outside, looking out over the ground, even though those things on his arms look a lot like goosebumps. Earlier, he'd noticed some of the members playing tennis. He says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Legend of Lord?s | 6/13/2005 | See Source »

...Since his international debut 12 years ago, McGrath has seldom fit the stereotype of the obsessive sportsman, let alone the boneheaded fast bowler. Raised on a sheep and wheat farm, a straight-A student through school in Narromine, in northwestern New South Wales, McGrath was set to become a carpenter until his talent for propelling a 5.5-ounce lump of cork, string and leather carried him to Sydney and beyond. As a cricketing tourist, he's shown an uncommon appreciation for the peculiar attractions of foreign lands; to his wife, Jane, he's the rock that's stood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Legend of Lord?s | 6/13/2005 | See Source »

During their mother's last hospitalization, Deborah was tending to her acutely ill father, so her elder sister became the hospital's main family contact. When a nurse called her sister at 2 a.m. to say their mother was fading fast, Deborah's sister did nothing. Deborah had hoped to be with her mother at the end, perhaps to say a few last words. "My sister took that chance away from me," Deborah says, "and because of her, my mother died alone. I will never forgive her for that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Cares More for Mom? | 6/12/2005 | See Source »

...folks into a documentary, and they can't stop talking about it. In the past two years, Fahrenheit 9/11 had audiences proclaiming Michael Moore as savior or anti-Christ. Super Size Me, that Big Machiavellian experiment in fast-food bingeing, made a star of director and guinea pig Morgan Spurlock. Capturing the Friedmans posed a troubling mystery about a seemingly nice suburban family that viewers had to resolve for themselves. And Winged Migration turned every moviegoer into an awestruck ornithologist. The moral: films needn't serve as just pacifiers or pulse racers. That's what Hollywood does. Get people arguing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Now, Meet The Dockers | 6/12/2005 | See Source »

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