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Hartford, meanwhile, received a first round bye--a product of the NCAA tournament expansion from 32 teams to 48--and may feel a bit of rust against the match tough Crimson...

Author: By Richard A. Perez, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: W. Soccer Faces Round Two | 11/13/1998 | See Source »

...foreign as Roxbury and Southie. However, most Bostonians know and abhor the constant reality that driving anywhere in the city means--fighting insufferable traffic, endless construction and inevitable road rage. According to many of these frustrated drivers, the root of the chaos is the Central Artery, an elevated, rust-coated hunk of steel that carries crawling traffic north to south through the middle of Boston...

Author: By Frances G. Tilney, | Title: Dig This. | 11/5/1998 | See Source »

However, Moore may suffer from mild rust through the first few games. He has missed the final two weeks of preseason training with a shoulder injury, though is expected to play in tomorrow's opener against Brown...

Author: By Michael R. Volonnino, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: High Expectations Set for M. Hockey | 11/5/1998 | See Source »

...surely expanded it hateward as well. Wallace was one of the great political arsonists; no material in America was more flammable than race. He took his magnificent sneer and slurring menace up North to Rust Belt, hard-hat territory and, as if in a century-delayed retaliation for Sherman's march, he scorched the earth with a message of racial contempt and populist economic grievance. In the 1968 election, he took 13% of the popular vote and won five states...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GEORGE CORLEY WALLACE: 1919-1998: Requiem for an Arsonist | 9/28/1998 | See Source »

...real capitalism, which is not solely about mergers and acquisitions but about production as well. And the simple fact is that Russia does not produce. The old rust belt--defense-oriented enterprises employing tens of thousands each--are still lurching along, turning out things so costly and so shoddy that no one wants to buy them. In Soviet times, workers joked that they pretended to work and the state pretended to pay them. Now the line could be that the workers pretend to make things and the factories pretend to sell them. The plants can't pay their taxes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Free Fall | 9/7/1998 | See Source »

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