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...effort to drive that point home, Warden peppered chief government witness and Netscape CEO Jim Barksdale Tuesday with questions about his years as a salesman at IBM. Didn't Big Blue throw its weight around, too? "We were trained to behave as if we were a monopoly," said Barksdale, "because we were operating under a consent decree" -- which IBM had the good sense not to test, unlike Microsoft's wrangling last year. Touch?. But didn't IBM do its own fair share of bundling products? Yes, but they were forced to unbundle in 1968, said the Netscape boss, which "gave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Microsoft Mafia | 10/21/1998 | See Source »

...find a bloody computer monitor in my bed," the browser whiz kid told Justice Department lawyers. But as the Microsoft antitrust trial enters its third day, Redmond attorneys continue to argue that brutal mafia-speak is no vice in the cuttthroat software industry. "Antitrust laws," said Microsoft counsel John Warden, "are not a code of civility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Microsoft Mafia | 10/21/1998 | See Source »

Willard, the warden of the Gund polling station on the corner of Quincy and Cambridge Streets, has been affiliated with the Cambridge Election Committee since...

Author: By Jacqueline A. Newmyer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Even in Ivory Tower's Shadow, Turnout is Low | 9/16/1998 | See Source »

...build a relationship with his condemned clients, he would play chess with them by postcard, with as many as nine miniature boards of partly played games cluttering his cramped office at any given time. And Kendall once had to be restrained from throwing a punch at a burly warden who refused to allow his doomed client John Spenkelink to see a clergyman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Breaking The Silence | 8/3/1998 | See Source »

Nunn has done a masterly job of taming this unruly work. The audience sits, theater-in-the-round style, on opposing sides of a long stage. At one end is a two-level block of cells; at the other, the warden's office, where every prop--desk, telephone, picture frames, even the American flag--is a grim steel gray. He doesn't soften the melodramatic excesses, yet he emphasizes the metaphorical overtones. There are references to Mussolini and Hitler ("that monkey with the trick mustache"); a Jewish convict laments, "I come of a people that are used to suffer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: A Sweatbox Named Desire | 6/22/1998 | See Source »

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