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...mile intensified last week as Britain's Steve Ovett, 25, and Sebastian Coe, 24, once more took turns shooting down one another's world records. In Zurich on Aug. 19, Coe reclaimed his record (set in 1979 and broken by Ovett in 1980), taking 27/100 sec. off the mark with a time of 3 min. 48.53 sec. Exactly a week later, Ovett announced that he wanted to go after the new record at a meet in Koblenz, West Germany. No mile event had been scheduled-its metric near equivalent, the 1,500-meter run, was on the Koblenz...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Can They Top This? Stick Around | 9/7/1981 | See Source »

...less than friendly rivalry between Great Britain's marvelous distance runners Sebastian Coe, 24, and Steve Ovett, 25, has become the track world's version of playing chess by mail. Each year, the two set out on separate paths through the summer track circuit, studiously avoiding head-to-head encounters while carefully selecting races where they have the best chance of breaking each other's world records. In 1979 Coe burst from obscurity by snapping the record in the mile, with a 3-min. 49.0-sec. performance in Oslo (only twelve days after setting a world mark...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Flying Feet | 8/31/1981 | See Source »

...struggle, the terrorists have come to draw most of their support-and recruits-from the dismal industrial suburbs that dot the narrow Basque mountain valleys some 20 to 25 miles inland. One such is Renteria (pop. 18,000), which adjoins the old Spanish summer royal residence of San Sebastian. A river running through town has the sickly sweet stench of dumped industrial wastes. A pall of chemical smoke from paper, plastics and cement factories hangs over the area on all but the windiest days. The town has a medieval center with a church and central square; the impression...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spain: Terrorists from the Mountains | 8/10/1981 | See Source »

...King Juan Carlos' first official tour of Spain's volatile, autonomy-minded Basque country, and the reception was often only lukewarm, sometimes hostile. Security forces outnumbered the crowds nearly everywhere, and at most of their stops-from Vitoria to San Sebastian -the King and his wife, Queen Sofia, also had to endure the presence of angry Basque demonstrators, who were raising clenched-fist salutes and chanting anthems and slogans in their ancient language...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spain: A Shrewd King | 2/16/1981 | See Source »

...John Sebastian, programming director at WCOZ said yesterday deregulation is "a positive step that will give freedom back to the airwaves." The station will not change its news stance, Sebastian said, adding that it is too early to tell if its public affairs programming will be affected...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FCC Drops Radio Regulations; Will Not Affect WHRB's Format | 1/16/1981 | See Source »

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