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...protests go, it was unusually orderly: no tear gas, no arrests, no scuffling. About 100 federal employees staged a "work-in" today at a Social Security office in Maryland, demanding that the Clinton Administration and Congress settle the budget dispute and let them get back to work. When asked to go home, they did. More work-ins are expected to crop up this week at other federal offices...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ENOUGH ALREADY | 12/26/1995 | See Source »

Success--and hard work--are no stranger to Hill, who commuted two hours a day from his home in Ijamsville (pronounced Imesville, not I-Jams-ville), Maryland to attend nationally-ranked DeMatha High School in Washington, DC, where he captained the No. 10 ranked DeMatha Stags...

Author: By R. ALAN Leo, | Title: Tim Hill Points M. Cagers Straight Ahead | 12/15/1995 | See Source »

Brown (1-5) may be better than its record indicates. The Bears have had a tough time of it lately, losing three games by a combined margin of just seven points, the last two to St. Francis (NY) and Maryland-Eastern Shore. But with senior guards Steve Silas and Eric Blackiston beginning to find their touches from outside, they are sure to bounce back...

Author: By Dov J. Glickman, | Title: Big Green Takes Early League Lead | 12/14/1995 | See Source »

Kedlaya, a resident of Maryland and a math and physics concentrator, was recommended to the Morgan Prize Committee by Joe Gallian of the University of Minnesota, Duluth. In high school, Kedlaya was a three-time winner of the USA Math Olympiad and won two gold medals and a silver medal at the International Math Olympiad...

Author: By Nicholas K. Mitrokostas, | Title: Math Wiz Takes Honorable Mention in Contest | 12/12/1995 | See Source »

Modell declined the subcommittee's invitation to appear. But John Moag, the chairman of the Maryland Stadium Authority that lured the Browns to Baltimore, did testify. Shedding crocodile tears, Moag said, "Marylanders have tremendous empathy for what Cleveland is going through right now. We have been there; we know the pain all too well." Moag went on to say that fan support was no longer enough to keep a franchise. A city requires "political courage" and a business sense of "what professional athletics means to a community's image and pocketbook." In other words, a brand-new stadium with lots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BAD BOUNCES FOR THE N.F.L. | 12/11/1995 | See Source »

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