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When a Leverett House fire alarm rang last Sunday afternoon, G-tower residents followed what has come to be a familiar routine: They filed out of the building, stood in the cold and expected to be let back inside once officials realized it was a false alarm...

Author: By Garrett M. Graff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Holding Fire | 2/14/2000 | See Source »

...McCain. He will nearly always side openly with a person who is about to be stomped by a crowd. I've seen this over and over again in his instinctive reaction to situations. I was standing with him in a parking lot late one night when his cell phone rang. It was an Arizona political reporter calling to say the Republican mayor of Tempe had just been outed as a homosexual, and was under fire from Arizona's conservative establishment. McCain didn't even think about it. He went on ad nauseam about what a good man the mayor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: My Friend the Loose Cannon | 2/14/2000 | See Source »

...morality of the decision, Campaign Diary caught up with Keyes at Applebee's in Manchester, N.H. The Maryland resident was just settling into a booth in the Elvis Presley Boulevard corridor of the restaurant, and as if to affirm our sense of him as a potential spoiler, staff phones rang incessantly. The Ollie North radio show wanted him. CNN's Crossfire had to have him. Rush Limbaugh listeners said Rush had him finishing third in New Hampshire, derailing Forbes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Campaign 2000: The Candidate Mosh Likely | 2/7/2000 | See Source »

...best reason to keep the public Genome Project going, its scientists say, is that it is, well, public. Alarm bells rang last year when Celera announced that it had filed provisional patents on hundreds of newly discovered genes--a list that by last week had grown to include thousands of genes. Venter has pledged that he will eventually give away the completely decoded genome and make his money by selling the computer services needed to make sense of it. For now, however, he is charging $5,000 to $5 million a year to wade through his data...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gene Machine | 1/24/2000 | See Source »

Democratic congressional candidates were raking in money last year. Not so the Democratic National Committee. The D.N.C.'s year-end finance report at the end of this month will chart about $40 million in donations in 1999--well below the $48 million it rang into its coffers four years earlier. That leaves the party with just $2.5 million in the bank at a crucial time. By late March AL GORE or BILL BRADLEY will emerge victorious but dead broke and dependent on the D.N.C. to carry on the campaign until the August convention, when each party's nominee gets public...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fund Raising | 1/17/2000 | See Source »

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