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...Barrett Seaman, a former TIME editor and correspondent, is the author of Binge: What Your College Student Won't Tell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Bingeing Became the New College Sport | 8/21/2005 | See Source »

...ironic twist, the President found himself trying to explain away a gaffe by his top aide. Regan, he said, merely meant that wives "also had an interest in children and a human touch"--a comment not likely to dispel the controversy. --By David Beckwith. Reported by Barrett Seaman and Adam Zagorin/Geneva

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Keeping Up Appearances | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

Died. W.B. Lipes, 84, lieut. commander for the U.S. Navy and pharmacist's mate whose emergency appendectomy on a shipmate--the first ever on a submarine--became one of the most famous lifesaving feats of World War II; of pancreatic cancer; in New Bern, N.C. When Seaman Darrell Rector fell ill on Sept. 11, 1942, aboard the Seadragon--which had no doctor on board and was a week away from the nearest port--Lipes, who had observed the procedure as a lab technician, was ordered to lead the surgical team. Using ground sulfa pills as an antiseptic and a gauze...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones May 2, 2005 | 4/24/2005 | See Source »

...found guilty of conspiring with his brother John to sell secrets to the Soviets. John Walker, 48, also a former Navy chief radioman and the alleged ringleader, is scheduled to go on trial for espionage in Baltimore on Oct. 28. John's son, Michael, 22, a former Navy seaman, will be tried after his father. All four were arrested after John Walker's former wife Barbara told the FBI last November that she suspected her husband had been spying for the Soviets for more than 15 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Spy Ring Goes to Court | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

Such belittling descriptions would not seem appropriate for a man who had triggered an untimely presummit squabble between the superpowers and a clash of wills between the Executive and Legislative branches of the U.S. Government. Soviet Merchant Seaman Miroslav Medvid, 25, had inadvertently created this political uproar on Oct. 24 by leaping 40 feet from the Soviet freighter Marshal Konev into the Mississippi River near New Orleans. When the ship, laden with corn, finally pulled away from its dock last Saturday afternoon with Medvid aboard, a sad personal and political saga that had lasted for more than two weeks apparently...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kicking and Screaming | 4/18/2005 | See Source »

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