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...Lahoud won his extra three years anyway, setting Lebanon on a perilous path of confrontation between allies of Syria and its opponents that led to Hariri's murder in a massive bomb blast five months later. And two years on, that confrontation appears to still be taking a deadly toll. Gemayel's murder has brought Lebanon's Western-backed government dangerously close to collapse. Six pro-Syrian Shi'ite ministers quit the 24-member coalition cabinet a week ago after their bid for extra seats that would give them a veto-wielding one-third stake in the government was rebuffed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lebanon's Cabinet Ministers Wonder Who Could Be Next | 11/22/2006 | See Source »

Harvard can offer no reasonable defense of our meager and parsimonious Thanksgiving vacation. Tuesday and Wednesday lectures record infamously low attendance anyway, and the loss of barely three academic days is more than compensated by a restorative and relaxing Thanksgiving with your family at home. Harvard students may live away from home most of the year, but Thanksgiving is a time to be with family and loved ones, not in a dorm room in Cambridge...

Author: By Adam A Solomon | Title: Give Us a Break | 11/21/2006 | See Source »

...1990s, Australia's batsmen realized that many of the fast-scoring techniques used in one-day cricket could be applied to Tests, and as a group routinely began to amass 350-plus runs a day. Other countries copied them, to the point where the drawn match?the somnolent one, anyway, that blight on the game?has all but vanished. As Australia rose, then soared, so did the notion that Test teams should have a coach to complement the captain in finetuning their performance. Between 1986 and '96, Bob Simpson was crucial in taking Australia from the bottom of the pile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Twilight of the Gods | 11/20/2006 | See Source »

...that either side has much latitude here anyway. In a pair of hearings last Wednesday that seemed to produce little news, CENTCOM boss Gen. John Abizaid made it remarkably clear that he didn't see any good options. He said that he didn't want to add more troops (except to train Iraqis) because the Maliki government would never take responsibility for security if he did. But he doesn't want to draw forces down either. Why? He said that none - as in zero - of the nearly 100 already trained Iraqi army units were ready to operate independent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Plan of Retreat | 11/20/2006 | See Source »

...that either side has much latitude here anyway. In a pair of hearings last Wednesday that seemed to produce little news, CENTCOM boss Gen. John Abizaid made it remarkably clear that he didn't see any good options. He said that he didn't want to add more troops (except to train Iraqis) because the Maliki government would never take responsibility for security if he did. But he doesn't want to draw forces down either. Why? He said that none - as in zero - of the nearly 100 already trained Iraqi army units were ready to operate independent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Plan of Retreat | 11/20/2006 | See Source »

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