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...Brown to have a chance it will need Hartigan to have a monster game against a Crimson defense that will stack the box with four defensive linemen, three linebackers, two safeties, eight members of the Harvard marching band and a couple of hobos from the Providence Amtrak station...

Author: By Michael R. James, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Scouting the Opponents | 9/17/2004 | See Source »

...deny her role in events. "I see now there were signs," she says, "but I was drunk, so they were kind of blurry and went by really fast." If her show sounds like a downer, it's not. Though she has never been the kind of comic to stack up one-liners, she manages, over two rambling hours, to take aim at the standard fodder--politicians, pets, audience members--in the same slightly exasperated and self-mocking tone that made her such a success in the 1990s when she played large auditoriums and had two HBO specials and (briefly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Standing Back Up | 9/13/2004 | See Source »

...Patrick Stack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tabs On The Toll | 9/6/2004 | See Source »

...long time since 7 a.m., when Whittaker's daily immersion in news begins: 11 papers online at home over breakfast, perhaps a call from editor-in-chief Chris Mitchell who's out walking the dogs, then another newspaper on the bus into work. Every night he bins a stack of papers and printouts on his way out the door, and every morning the blank layouts of another day's paper are waiting for him. He's ringmaster of the news section, which means filling up to a dozen broadsheet pages, "throwing balls into the air every day, catching them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In the Land of The Oz | 7/29/2004 | See Source »

Kerry's pick of a charismatic newcomer whose entire public life consists of 5 1/2 years in the Senate reveals two things: Kerry's confidence that, even in these serious times, his foreign-policy credentials are enough to stack up against a wartime Commander in Chief and his calculation that what he most needs to turn the race his way is a heart transplant. In Edwards, Kerry hopes he has found a surrogate who can connect with swing-state voters in ways he has not been able to, who has the working-class roots and the political gift to touch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside The Decision: The Gleam Team | 7/19/2004 | See Source »

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