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Whether a Labor government would manage Australia's $1 trillion economy as adeptly as have Howard and Costello remains a voter concern, according to polls. However, Rudd has largely defused economic management as an issue. The thrust of his case is that Australia's strong economy is less the result of any judicious handling on the part of the government than of the ongoing minerals boom and watershed reforms undertaken in the 1980s by Labor governments. He's repeatedly cast himself as an economic conservative and tried to prove it by declining to match the government's extravagant spending promises...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kevin Rudd: Australia's New Prime Minister | 11/22/2007 | See Source »

...almost made extinct in the 1970s by cheaper transistor-based amps, vacuum tubes (also known as valves) are back in the mix for a growing number of high-end audio companies. This isn't just sonic nostalgia: audiophiles have long claimed that tubes pump out warmer, smoother sounds - a result of the low-level distortion that tubes generate - than transistors. If your music goes down these tubes, it's guaranteed to amplify your listening pleasure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tubular Belles | 11/21/2007 | See Source »

...Jerusalem if they ran for office in local elections. They don't. Palestinian leaders in the West Bank warn that casting ballots is like collaborating with the enemy. So when the city council elections were last held, in 2003, only 4,000 of 125,000 Arabs voted. As a result, East Jerusalem's residents pay 30% of total municipal taxes, but they get back services worth only 5% of the city's budget. Israeli courts have said the municipality should add 1,400 new classrooms in the East, but so far city hall has built only five...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jerusalem Divided | 11/21/2007 | See Source »

...with size and speed in basketball, it is said you can’t have it all.The problem for coaches and players alike is to figure out which one to go with. Last night, on its home court, Holy Cross went with size and Harvard countered with speed. The result was an 80-69 victory for the Crusaders at the Hart Center.Pounding the ball down low with 6’11” center Tim Clifford and 6’9” forward Alex Vander Baan, Holy Cross (4-0) was able to dominate the interior frontcourt, which proved...

Author: By Lucas A. Paul, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Holy Cross Denies Comeback Attempt | 11/21/2007 | See Source »

...with 5:38 left broke a 62-62 tie, and Holy Cross would never give up the lead again. Several of Clifford’s second-half buckets came when he was guarded by sophomore guard Jeremy Lin, who stands all of 6’2. The result of constant zone switching left the Crimson in some seriously compromising positions. “A lot of times a big guy would have to step out and help, and I would have to rotate down and end up on Clifford,” Lin said. “Obviously that?...

Author: By Ted Kirby, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Size Matters as Crusaders Dominate | 11/21/2007 | See Source »

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