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...little bit out of step with the music. The man in couple Z seems to be a little more with it. He's displaying excellent hip action and a genuine passion for the sport and his partner. Couple Y is having a little trouble with their toe leads--they're not pointing their toes into each step. They'll surely lose some points for that...

Author: By Virginia A. Triant, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: DANCE THE NIGHT AWAY | 11/2/1992 | See Source »

Even in a year of unlikely candidates, Patty Murray, who is running for the Senate in the State of Washington, stands out as an original. The 41-year-old state legislator and community-college teacher likes to call herself "a mom in tennis shoes." Going toe-to-toe on the footwear symbolism, her Republican opponent, five-time Congressman Rod Chandler, has taken to wearing cowboy boots. But no amount of heavy stomping on the campaign trail has yet put him ahead of a woman whose campaign slogan could be "Mother knows best." "I tell people I am a mom caring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Outsiders | 11/2/1992 | See Source »

Freshman Erica Cheng played "a gutsy tournament," said Graham. Suffering from a toe condition, she nevertheless pulled out a three-set victory against Princeton's Kelly Portzbach in the third flight draw...

Author: By Patty W. Seo, CONTRIBUTING REPORTER | Title: Strong Show for W. Tennis at Princeton | 10/20/1992 | See Source »

Perhaps there is a geopolitical reason for a SuperEurope to stand shoulder-to-shoulder--or toe-to-toe--with the United States. But the dream of a European superpower is confined to a few realpolitikers in European governments. It is not shared by ordinary citizens, who wish for economic growth, not geopolitical posturing...

Author: By Jacques E.C. Hymans, | Title: Misjudging Maastricht | 10/2/1992 | See Source »

...told a TV interviewer that the chances he would actually run were "very remote, not even worth talking about." His most zealous supporters, however, refuse to take what Perot now says at face value. Says Orson s followers, he said, would monitor the candidates to assess how well they toe the policy lines he has drawn. If Bush and Clinton both satisfy him -- an unlikely prospect -- Perot would stand down. If only one does, he might endorse that candidate. If they both fail his test, he implied, he might heed the calls from remaining fans to compete...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Remember Ross? | 9/21/1992 | See Source »

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