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...signs point to a peaceful transfer of power, and why not? Being the husband of the Senator from New York might enliven postpresidential life: building a library, making money and playing Gerald Ford golf could get dull. And, of course, it's a way to make up for the trouble he's caused. "On my visit a year ago," Hillary said at the Biondi event, "the last thing I imagined is that I would be standing here asking for your help in a run for the Senate." Indeed, a year ago some people didn't imagine she would still...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sunny Days Are Here Again | 9/6/1999 | See Source »

While survival for her means running for office, for the lame-duck vacationer it means golf and reading. On his first day of vacation, Clinton was seen carrying a new mystery, Cold Hit by Linda Fairstein; by the time he left for the Hamptons, he had read that and several others. There's a rocking chair in Skaneateles with his name on it. Hillary will once again be fund raising. The torch has been passed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sunny Days Are Here Again | 9/6/1999 | See Source »

...delight delights me, and I am down with the summertime blues. Winter lifts me up, and summer drags me down, and always has. A good thunderstorm helps, but then the sun comes out. I used to enjoy playing golf in the summer, but golf is a game that brings out the worst in people, and fishing is a very poor use of time, and basketball is perilous for the older guy. He fights for a rebound and snaps an Achilles tendon and spends six months in a walking cast--I wouldn't even want to be in the cast...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Rice, the Bat, the Baby | 9/6/1999 | See Source »

Andre Agassi isn't the only thing in tennis that's on the upswing. So is the game, and that's good news for racquet makers such as Wilson, Prince and Head, the company that makes Agassi's. With golf muscling in on the leisure market, racquet sales have been in a decade-long decline. This year sales could climb 5%, which is in some measure attributable to the ability of a Swedish turnaround artist to persuade the Austrian government's tobacco monopoly to sell him a sporting-goods company created by an American entrepreneur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Open: Winning the Racquet Game | 9/6/1999 | See Source »

Eliasch brought an innovation to the game--titanium--a material he took directly from golf. Head's Ti5 and Ti6 models, which weigh about 7 oz. and cost up to $250, were the world's top two selling racquets last year. In Agassi, Head may have the game's top salesman too. "In the past, tennis had Borg, McEnroe and Connors. Today there's only Andre," says Eliasch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Open: Winning the Racquet Game | 9/6/1999 | See Source »

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