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After his well-photographed chat with Kostunica, Ivanov spent a very private hour with Milosevic. To tell him what? Assurances that no one would haul him to the Hague? We know for sure what Milosevic told him: I may be down, but I'm not out. The wily old manipulator said it again to the Serbs, vowing to lie low only for a while. He would be back, ready to help his party "gain force" and take up a "prominent" role in politics again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The End Of Milosevic | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

...York City native, captain of his high school cross-country team and still a runner, intends to stay in his new business for the long haul--and keep moving it into new fields of artistic endeavor. "I would be bored doing something that's cookie cutter," Pullman says. To which the Isley Brothers might respond, "It's your thing. Do what you gotta do." Do you hear the music, Mr. King...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Creative Bonds: Banking On The Stars | 10/16/2000 | See Source »

...surviving commies in Cuba didn't do half badly. They may have failed to lift the prized baseball gold from the Yanquis, but finished in eighth place overall with 29 medals - a remarkable achievement for an impoverished country of 11 million people. Indeed, if each country's medal haul is divided by its population size in millions (which is, after all, its pool of available talent), Cuba comes out the second-place country over all with a remarkable 2.6 ratio. The runaway winners, of course, would be Australia, whose 58 medals divided among 18 million people would give...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ¡Ay, Caramba! Or, How Cuba Almost Won the Olympics | 10/2/2000 | See Source »

...Russian Rocket Alexander Popov each found himself bettered in one race or another--nobody caught Krayzelburg. Indeed, after a rough start, the rest of the U.S. team outswam the favored Australians, who performed before raucous hometown crowds. Swimming is the Olympics in Australia, yet the U.S. medal haul was the biggest since the boycott-depleted 1984 Games in Los Angeles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lenny Krayzelburg | 10/2/2000 | See Source »

...talking Quann, there was Ukrainian medley swimmer Yana Klochkova, 18; Romanian backstroker Diana Mocanu, 16; Hungarian breaststroker Agnes Kovacs, 19; American sprinter Anthony Ervin, 19. And, of course, there was Australian Ian Thorpe, 17, who after his relay swims finished with three gold and two silver medals, the biggest haul of the meet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Pool of Talent | 9/26/2000 | See Source »

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