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Stanford's weaknesses may be tailor-made forHarvard. Particularly in its early-season lossesto Wisconsin and UConn, it showed a susceptibilityto turnovers. The Cardinal relinquishes the rockan average of 20.8 times per game, compared to18.8 for its opponents...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: How to Slay A Giant 101 | 3/12/1998 | See Source »

...Colo. St. or SMU 14. Cincinnati 23-5 Thursday vs. USF or Louisville 15. South Carolina 21-6 Friday vs. Auburn or Florida 16. Arkansas 22-7 Friday vs. Tennessee or LSU 17. Michigan 21-8 Friday vs. Iowa 18. Illinois 21-8 Friday vs. Penn St. or Wisconsin 19. UCLA 21-7 Thursday vs. Arizona State 20. New Mexico 21-6 Thursday vs. Tulsa or BYU 21. Maryland 18-9 Friday vs. Georgia Tech 22. Syracuse 22-7 Thursday vs. Villanova or Pitt 23. West Virginia 22-7 Thursday vs. Miami or G-town 24. Temple 20-7 Thursday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AP MEN'S BASKETBALL TOP 25 | 3/3/1998 | See Source »

Koethe is a professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. He explained yesterday that while he considers himself a "philosopher by profession," he uses the summer to work on his poetry...

Author: By Alan E. Wirzbicki, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Poet Shares New Work With Students | 2/26/1998 | See Source »

Webster assigned a young scientist, Yoshihiro Kawaoka, to try to figure out how the virus transformed itself into such a "hot" pathogen. Kawaoka, now a professor of virology at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, compared the genetic structure of viruses from the first and second waves and found only a single, extremely subtle change in the H gene. The two viruses differed by just one nucleotide--one of 1,700 nucleotides that made up the gene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Flu Hunters | 2/23/1998 | See Source »

...before, but realizing how incomprehensible it is to some people makes it more than rhetoric. Looking around the hostel at the American women--me, a mainly Eastern European jumble; a girl from Baltimore, whose mother was Japanese and whose father was white; the girls who had just arrived from Wisconsin, one black, one white; a girl from Texas whose family was Mexican--one had to conclude, at the risk of sounding obviously idealistic, that there is no appearance that constitutes an "American" girl. Which would it be? For our generation, these women are Americans, plain and simple...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An 'American' Girl | 2/10/1998 | See Source »

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