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...Vegas casinos set a point spread for each game. It's published in newspapers across the U.S. and used by illegal bookmakers. Over the years, college coaches have taken the news media to task for providing this bookmaking service. Only a handful of large publications have refused to print the collegiate betting lines, among them the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Christian Science Monitor and the Sporting News...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Throwing The Game | 9/25/2000 | See Source »

...part, Gore expects to score his biggest points when he presses Bush to delve into the fine print of his own proposals - like how he plans to pay the estimated $1 trillion it will cost to reshape Social Security into a system where Americans can invest part of their premiums. Gore's team believes Bush has the rigor and tight message to get through the first two answers, but that his riff will begin to sound thin in the back and forth. Here too they hope to get to what they see as the greatest point of their endeavor: raising...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Debate Mind Games | 9/23/2000 | See Source »

...begun early in Drer's career, around 1497. These pictures are stuffed with detail, and the later sequences are, in comparison, a relief. The two most captivating series, Small Passion and Engraved Passion, represent a more restrained DŸrer. In the Small Passion, he creates what Fogg Museum print curator Marjorie Cohn describes as a comic book-like effect: 36 prints, each one possessing a strong left-to-right dynamic, pull the viewer through the Christian narrative, from original sin to the last judgment. This series of doctrinal woodcuts, which were, unlike engravings, cheap and available to great swaths...

Author: By Benjamin E. Lytal, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Durer is in the Details | 9/22/2000 | See Source »

...course, each print is interesting in itself. DŸrer is in the details - floating loincloths, skulls, cross-hatching. But DŸrer was more than an engraver. Curator Jordan Kantor borrowed rare works from European museums, bare but masterful drawing and sketches...

Author: By Benjamin E. Lytal, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Durer is in the Details | 9/22/2000 | See Source »

Hoping to engage and enrage everyday travelers, print and television outlets told horror stories of how a contract dispute among United Airlines pilots was wreaking havoc with business and pleasure flyers alike. Those reports were most often followed by warnings that the U.S. aviation industry--currently being pushed to its operational limits--could only get worse from here...

Author: By Scott A. Resnick, | Title: Taking Flight | 9/21/2000 | See Source »

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