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...Myth" No. 4: That the found Bush votes in Nassau County - one of the three targets of the Gore contest - are somehow illegal. Daryl Bristow, Bartlit's partner, in charge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Meet Dubya's Legal Cavalry | 11/28/2000 | See Source »

...world leaders will wobble and general mischief will abound. In Baker's view, the bipartisan counters are secret croupiers itching to stack the deck. There are more surveillance cameras than in a Las Vegas casino and more on-site baby sitters than in your average day-care center, but somehow these volunteers are going to cook the books...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Election 2000: Spot the Characters? | 11/27/2000 | See Source »

Between the hectoring voice of James Baker and the monotone of Warren Christopher, David Boies cheerfully made the Democratic case to the TV crews. In a crisis atmosphere, he gave off an aura of confidence that somehow the system would work--not in weeks but in days. As he earnestly told a Russian TV reporter one night, "This doesn't happen very often here in this country. It's not a question of legal maneuvering. And it ought not to be a question of politics. It's a question of whom did the voters want." The Russian walked off, nodding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE LAWYER WHO WOULD SAVE GORE: Master of the Impossible | 11/27/2000 | See Source »

...relations problem for Bush if the Supreme Court hadn't already relieved him of that soft spot in his normally well-forged message. Let them make sense of it all. In taking the case Friday, the Supremes brushed off Bush's flimsiest complaint, that non-hand-counted counties were somehow being deprived of their rights when it was his campaign that decided not to include them in the first place. And now Bush is free to drill for votes in promising places right along with Gore - if he wins in the Supreme Court, he'll happily toss them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Deadline Is Over — What Now? | 11/25/2000 | See Source »

Insofar as Harvard teaches you the cultural accoutrements for the "good life," this lesson is harmless in its effect, yet when it imparts the belief that the "good life" is somehow a better life, the lesson can be harmful and is perhaps better left untaught. Fundamentally, there is nothing inherently "good" about the lifestyle that Harvard promotes. It is one lifestyle among many, and the only thing that distinguishes it from the rest is, of course, that most people can't afford it. The "good life" ain't cheap, and, after our time at Harvard, affording it can be quite...

Author: By John PAUL Rollert, | Title: Tailgating, Harvard Style | 11/22/2000 | See Source »

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