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Kick off winter with Warren Miller!

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FIND A SHOW NEAR YOU

Kick off winter with Warren Miller!

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Everything

Outside magazine, April 1995 Cowboy Nation: Clothes Make the Cowpoke From the homespun to the highflautin, the best in buckaroo gear By Sara Corbett In a marketplace choked with faux western wear, it’s important to keep in mind that cowboys, real cowboys,…

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Outside magazine, April 1995 Wildlife: To Love, Honor, and Consume Do American Indians have a better idea for Yellowstone’s bison mess? By Amy Linn Sunrise glows on rifle barrels as park rangers and game wardens huddle in a Montana snowfield just outside…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Now, He Can Really Start Carousing After a near crash at the top of the course, in which he momentarily skidded on his hip, Alberto Tomba recovered spectacularly to capture his first-ever world championship gold medal last February at Sierra Nevada, Spain.

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Outside magazine, April 1995 Cowboy Nation: King of the Yee-Hah He knows everything there is to know about life in the saddle. Catch him at a 100-mph gallop, and he’ll tell you all about it. By Tim Cahill Four or five…

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Outside magazine, April 1995 Cowboy Hit Parade “Home on the Range,” TRADITIONAL, CIRCA 1880 “When the Work’s All Done This Fall,” CARL T. SPRAGUE, 1925 “Tumbling Tumbleweeds,” SONS OF THE PIONEERS, 1932 “Cattle Call,” TEX OWENS, 1934…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Oh, Canada It’s not easy following in the footsteps of Ben Johnson, but Canadian Donovan Bailey–the reigning 100-meter world champion who at press time had won six of the seven indoor events he’d entered in 1996–is doing just that. Last February…

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Outside magazine, April 1995 Cowboy Nation: Introduction Whatever the decade, whatever the mood, we always have Shane in our hearts. A salute to the most dependable and deconstructed American hero. By William Kittredge Before I could read, I learned to imitate buckaroos…

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Outside magazine, April 1995 Dude-Free Ranches By Sara Corbett All ‘Round Ranch, Jensen, Utah. This 400-square-mile spread in the northeastern corner of Utah will put you on a horse and keep you there for four- to six-day pack trips through aspen-covered backcountry. Capacity:…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Cooking: Everet-Fresh Bags By Michael Mcrae A pint of raspberries or a bunch of spinach–even if sealed in a plastic bag, chilled in a cooler, and shielded from physical abuse–will look pretty wan (or worse) ten days into a raft…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Backpacking: McHale Inex By Mike Randolph An expedition backpack is the thing for hauling gear to and from base camp, but what about the day hikes you want to take from there? The big pack is overkill, and an extra…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 The $800 Ride of Your Life By Gordon Black As you move up from your entry-level mountain bike, your investment can bring tangible returns. The more money you spend, the lighter and more responsive the frame, the smoother and more…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Buying Right: Function, Fashion, and the Fat Tire By Gordon Black Mountain bikers, you’ve probably noticed, are different from road cyclists in just about every respect except the number of wheels under them. This is especially true in matters…

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Outside magazine, May 1996 Fishing: Vagabond Travel Fly Rod By Jerry Gibbs It’s inevitable: you’re biking beside a mountain stream or visiting the in-laws on Flathead Lake when a monstrous trout–the Hulk Hogan of salmonids–ghosts to the surface right in front of you.

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Outside magazine, May 1997 Toward Thee I Lurch, Thou All-Destroying but Uninterested Grizzly Bear Like Ahab before him, Troy Hurtubise obsessively stalks the Great Other, donning 147 pounds of homemade armor, suffering countless test-pummelings, and sliding into bankruptcy as he awaits the ultimate…

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Bodywork, May 1997 Cycling By Jim Harmon Please excuse hard-core cyclists for that cocky post-ride walk of theirs — they’re just a bit stiff from an exercise that arguably strengthens and tones the sum of your leg muscles more thoroughly than any…

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Bodywork, May 1997 Be a Thigh Master And you’ll prep the rest of your leg muscles for a summer of fun By Jim Harmon Not that you need a reminder, but the time has come to leave the gym behind.

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Bodywork, May 1997 Medicine Stocking up the athlete’s home pharmacy By Daryn Eller Far be if from us to suggest that your next run down a rocky trail could leave you battered and bruised. Still, accidents happen, and it’s better…

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Destinations, May 1997 The Truth About Hats and Togs Where to get great deals on misnamed chapeaux By Bob Payne Keep this one under your hat: panama hats aren’t made in Panama. They acquired that name because most are exported…

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Destinations, May 1997 Getting Around: Anchors — and Bombs — Aweigh See Alaska from the deck of a minesweeper By Peter Nelson In recent years, Southeast alaska, with its 10,000 miles of coastline, towering old-growth spruce, and almost guaranteed…

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Bodywork, May 1997 Prescriptions: Getting the Kinks Out By Alan CotĂ© Flat tires may be an unavoidable unpleasantry of cycling, but the dull, achy tightness in your neck and shoulders after a two-hour ride is a nuisance you can avoid and something…

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Destinations, May 1997 Looking for Lava in All the Right Places Hike like the Incas. Meet a friendly ex-headhunter or two. And see mountains vent steam. All within Ecuador’s Avenue of the Volcanoes. By Bob Payne In the past, Ecuador…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Environment: The Yellow Haze of Texas America and Mexico join forces to answer a perplexing question: Why’s the air so dirty in our nation’s most remote preserve? By John Shinal From his seat near the front window…

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Destinations, May 1997 Inns & Lodges: Sleeping Beauties Smoking out the overlooked fire-spotting towers By Lorien Warner In 1981, when the forest service first got the notion to convert some of its outmoded and decommissioned fire-spotting towers into ultra-primitive wilderness…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Entertainment: Who Needs the Great Outdoors? A few words with Evan Dando, reluctant champion of the proudly slothful By Hal Espen For nearly a decade, Evan Dando has been lead singer of the Lemonheads, a band…

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Destinations, May 1997 Honk If You Voted for El Loco Ecuador’s volcanoes seem too tame for you? Try its politics. By Joshua Hammer Middle-American tourists on the hunt for Andean woolens and Panama hats don’t usually expect to find themselves…

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Destinations, May 1997 Follow Me. I Have a Mule. The right outfitter can keep a highlands trip low-stress By Bob Payne While it’s possible to plan and outfit a trip through the Ecuadorian highlands on your own, the logistics of…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Law Enforcement: This Is the Park Service: Come Out with Your Hands Up On a hotly contested piece of southern California, the feds move in By Michael Parrish On a drizzly, cold January morning at a rustic…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Physics: Bloody Idiotic, As You Chaps Might Say The (possibly apocryphal) tale of British Rail’s chicken cannon misadventure By Shane Dubow By now, anyone who’s gone on-line knows the Internet is great at hatching all manner of…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Sport: A Man, A Plan, and a Hell of a Tan With a patient approach and all the tools, JosĂ© Loiola stands poised to become the new King of the Beach By Johnny Dodd “Right now,…

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Dispatches, May 1997 Treasure Hunting: Thank You, Fidel, May I Have Another Gold Ingot By Miro Cernetig “There could be billions in gold down there,” says Glenn Costello, practically chuckling as he thumbs through slides of sparkling silver coins and other booty…

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Outside magazine, May 1997 Bends in the River Time and man roiled his boyhood waters, yet memories still flow unchecked By John Jerome We name places, places name us, whether we want them to or not. I’m an Oklahoman, although…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Havana in the Rearview Mirror A final, heartbreaking trip through la revolucion By Randy Wayne White Land, sea, or air, 90 miles is 90 miles, except when describing the water space between Havana and Key West, a distance protracted by…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Cycling: The LeMond Boomerang By Alan Cote In the quest to build the lightest frame, some bike designers have chucked rigidity along with weight. That’s the reason many cutting-edge bikes flex considerably under pedaling forces, resulting in a mushy ride that soaks…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Tour Preview: Meanwhile, Among the Grown-ups… A bookie’s-eye view of the big race By Eric Hagerman Months before this year’s Tour de France, and already the rumors were voyant. The course, some claimed, was designed to expose the weakness…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Not As Bad, But Still Not Nice Seven other places where you can expect the unexpected By Debra Shore Great Smoky Mountains National Park, North Carolina and Tennessee This is a drive-through park, so it’s not surprising that…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 A Guide to the Guide By Debra Shore Mug Shot: What’s the nature of the criminal behavior? Why do deviants like this place so much? The Facts: Some numbers you should know, including how many acres each ranger must cover,…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Marathon: Ahhhhhhhhhh! By Todd Balf (with Derek Rielly) “We were screaming,” said American Bob Kempainen in the aftermath of April’s Boston Marathon, where perfect weather conditions helped 11 runners crack the vaunted 2:10 mark–the most in marathon history. Especially screaming was defending…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Bad Lands At Joshua Tree, it’s Satanism. At Daniel Boone, it’s ganja farming. At Lake Mead, it’s homicide. Crime is on the rise where you’d least expect it. A report from the seamier side of the American wilderness experience. By…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Service With a Stickup Are your chambermaid and mule guide friendly? Courteous? Under indictment? By Debra Shore Ironically, the biggest threats to your safety and property in several of our most popular national parks may be the very people hired…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 A Hip New Twist to Swimming Technique The secret to the perfect workout, say Olympic coaches, is all in the midsection By Laura Hilgers To become a more powerful and efficient swimmer, practice this simple dry-land exercise:…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Utah Five-O What Ranger Rick does between nature talks By Debra Shore From the Bullfrog subdistrict dispatch log, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah, May 28-30, 1993. FRIDAY 9:16 A.M. Large group of underage youths drinking at…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Books: Polar Sagas By Andrea Barrett Mind Over Matter: The Epic Crossing of the Antarctic Continent, by Ranulph Fiennes (Delacorte Press, $21.95). Shadows on the Wasteland: Crossing Antarctica with Ranulph Fiennes, by Mike Stroud (Overlook Press, $21.95). The fun of…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Regimens: A No-Drag Pool Session By Laura Hilgers If anyone could swim on strength alone, it would be Amy Van Dyken, America’s fastest female 50-meter freestyler. At six feet and 155 pounds, the 23-year-old Olympian is all power. “But even…

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Outside magazine, July 1994 Buying Right: No-Hands Hydrators By John Lehrer Drinking plenty of fluids during prolonged exercise is essential to performance and safety, but toting a sufficient supply can be inconvenient: Scout canteens or a couple of water bottles just don’t carry well on an…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Marathon Do look back. Ladies: underdog Jenny Spangler may be gaining By Gretchen Reynolds Jenny Spangler, the unsponsored, unheralded, and extremely unlikely winner of the 1996 Women’s Olympic Marathon Trials, goes into the…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Middle Distance It is written in the sod: two golds for Haile Gebrselassie By Martin Dugard Haile Gebrselassie doesn’t just run: he redefines the perceived boundaries of human performance. Last June, the 23-year-old, 5-foot-3…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Marathon: Odds That … Jenny Spangler will win a medal……..16-1 Uta Pippig will fail to medal……..50-1 At least one runner will succumb to heat prostration…..2-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Rowing: Odds That… The U.S. women’s eight will break six minutes…..3-1 The U.S. men’s eight will win a gold medal……..10-1 Redgrave and Pinsent will remain undefeated…….1-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Mountainbiking Will Tinker Juarez triumph–or psych himself out trying? By Alan Cote and Eric Hagerman Until last year, the word on Tinker Juarez was that were he ever to recognize just how strong…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Mountain Biking: Odds That… Alison Sydor will capture the gold medal……3-2 Tinker Juarez will medal……..3-1 Thomas Frischknecht will break something…….8-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Rowing The Peskiest foe for the U.S. women’s eight? Overconfidence. By Lisa Twyman Bessone “It’s great that everyone will be gunning for us,” says Yaz Farooq, coxswain of the U.S. women’s eight crew…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Middle Distance: Odds That African runners will claim every gold……..9-1 Gebrselassie will set at least one world record………10-1 An American will medal……….15-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Whitewater: Odds That… Americans will sweep the solo events……..10-1 The dam will burst during David Hearn’s run…..20-1 Scott Shipley will fail to win the gold medal……..100-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Swimming A skeptical world can’t help but ask: will the Chinese women come clean? By Gretchen Reynolds In the history of competitive aquatics, no team has ever been so reviled as China’s female swimmers. Arriving…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Are you Ready for the Bubbalympics? With a skybox rife with sponsors and a slate of flashy new events–plus 10,000 supremely gifted athletes–the pinnacle of sports breaks from its past. By Paul Kvinta There’s a reason they…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Book On: Whitewater Yes, Scott Shipley’s laid back–but he’s still too good to beat By Julian Rubinstein By the time the evacuation order was announced at tennessee’s Ocoee Whitewater Center on April 21, the afternoon sky…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Swimming: Odds That A Chinese swimmer will test positive for steroids……..1-1 Brooke Bennett will beat Janet Evans……..2-1 Caterpillar fungus will be America’s next health-food craze…..100-1…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Welcome to the Power Vortex Way up in the wilds of northern California, a harmonic convergence of high peaks, spires, whitewater, and singletrack By Andrew Rice When seemingly all of urban California is heading for Sierra Nevada retreats…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Adventure: Blisters R Us By John Alderman On July 24, two single-engine floatplanes will drop six explorers onto the icy chop of Summit Lake, deep in Alaska’s Brooks Range. Once ashore, the team will begin a 20-mile trek through scree…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Culture: More Powerful Than a Chunk of Tofu Live from Washington, a new breed of bleeding heart By John Galvin A new comic-book hero boldly invades the nation’s newsstands this month: Liberal Man, a tree-hugging crusader out to…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Long Weekends: Whistler While You Play By Bob Howells When you’re sipping your first morning latte at Moguls and you hear one Whistler local tell another, “Saw a bear on the Valley Trail this morning,” your ears perk up. The…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Conquering the Other Mount Shasta By Andrew Rice Mount Shasta’s influence over northernmost California is more than just vertical. Almost everything you need–food, places to stay, equipment rental–is clustered in or around the tiny city of Mount Shasta, at the…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Inns & Lodges: Tall Ship Malabar Floating Bed & Breakfast Travers City, Michigan By Kathy Martin In Great Lakes maritime lore, passage on a Lake Michigan steamer or yacht demanded a healthy tolerance for mischance–the lake chalked up…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Jurisprudence: All the Vanishing Horses Is the BLM running roughshod over America’s fabled wild steeds? By Anne Goodwin Sides One of the bureau of land management’s better efforts in recent years has been the promotion of its…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Sasquatch Phone Home By Andrew Rice The Northern California mountains have long been known as bigfoot country. Sightings date back to the 1880s, but it was Roger Patterson’s now famous (and never discredited) 1967 film of a female bigfoot…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 The Minutiae: Of Medal Dreams and Collard Greens Behind the scenes, actuarially speaking, at Atlanta’s shining moment By Katie Arnold and Cory Johnson Established “quiet time” for athletes at the Olympic Village: 10 p.m. Closing time…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Is Everything to Your Liking Mr. Samaranch? Landing the greatest sporting event on earth requires a dash of seduction, a pinch of politics, and shameless quantities of palm grease. A recipe for bringing the Games to your hometown.

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Politics: Eat Your Heart Out, Al Gore Meet Sherry Boehlert, the man environmentalists can’t do without By John Galvin “He may well save the republicans in spite of themselves,” intones Mark Childress, vice-president of the Environmental Working Group,…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Good-Bye 1996, Hello 2004 As the sun descends on Atlanta, an anxious world turns its eyes to…Puerto Rico? By Stephanie Gregory While Boston elbows into position in the race for the 2008 Summer Olympics, the dash for the…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Field Notes: The Last Wilderness Few places are left like British Columbia’s rainforest. But for how long? By Doug Peacock Early July on the central coast of British Columbia was cold and wet. Clouds hovered over indistinct shorelines.

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Outside magazine, October 1994 Long Weekends: Survival of the Sespe An honest-to-God wild river two hours from Los Angeles By Andrew Rice Sespe Creek has miraculously survived the hell-bent development of the last half-century and is now the last river in southern California not…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Your Enemy Is Our Enemy “Well, they do like to shoot birds,” figures Maureen Hinkle, a lobbyist for the National Audubon Society. Hinkle is speculating on the motivations of the newest member of the green movement, the National Rifle Association. Last…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Promise Kept Natascha Badmann served notice on the multisport community last November, first winning the Duathlon World Championships and then finishing a respectable sixth in the short-course triathlon worlds a week later. This May, she followed through in impressive fashion, annihilating the…

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Outside magazine, October 1994 At Play in the Fields of the Maya The condo-free Yucatan is still out there. All you have to do is look for it. By Jeff Spurrier The bad news is you’re landing in CancĂșn. The good news is you…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Is This Any Way to Travel, the Sequel How, you may wonder, could self-proclaimed Father of Freefalling Dan Osman (“Is This Any Way to Travel,” January) one-up his earlier stunts of falling–deliberately–from 600-plus-foot cliffs and arresting himself with only climbing rope? “I…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Presumed Redundant Concluding a chain of events that resembles something out of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, U.S. marshals have finally located fugitive river guide William Stoner in Sydney, Australia, and are now pressing for his extradition. Stoner, you may recall,…

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Outside magazine, August 1996 Will Work for…Several Million Bucks With Lance Armstrong dominating the Tour DuPont last May, many wondered why his team’s sponsor, Motorola, chose the occasion to declare that it wouldn’t be backing the squad in ’97. Actually, the timing for the announcement…

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Outside magazine, October 1994 Mountaineering: Himalayan Hat Trick By Todd Balf (with Greg Child and Dan Dickison) As climbing seasons go, New Zealander Rob Hall had a phenomenal summer. On May 9, with Seattle’s Ed Viesturs, he led an 11-member team, including six guided clients, to…

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Outside magazine, October 1994 Mountaineering: Grivel Grippers By Douglas Gantenbein It’s really tough fighting the government,” says Anchorage attorney Neil O’Donnell. “They’re presumed to be right–unless you can show they acted arbitrarily, capriciously, or irrationally.” Last summer, in a case that O’Donnell helped bring, a federal…

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Outside magazine, October 1994 Bobsledding: What a Great Idea for a Movie By Todd Balf (with Greg Child and Dan Dickison) The U.S. bobsled team can’t seem to buy a win. First, they bombed at the Olympics in Lillehammer. Then, on a novel summer tour, they…

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