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Could $100 million, six tons of plutonium and a single phone call from Karl Rove help Republicans win back the Senate this fall? To Rove, the President's top political aide, it might just turn out to be the deal of the year. The story begins in Colorado, where Republican Senator Wayne Allard, who is running for re-election, got the Bush Administration to jump-start a plan to remove plutonium from a federal facility there and ship it to South Carolina, starting this month. That's good politics for Allard--but bad for Representative Lindsey Graham, who is running...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Keep Your Plutonium; Get Me Karl Rove! | 5/13/2002 | See Source »

Grandin is an assistant professor of animal sciences at Colorado State University

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Myself | 5/6/2002 | See Source »

...under the moniker NINA, short for New Identity Not Applicable and gangsta slang for a 9-mm gun. DIED. LINDA BOREMAN, 53, better known as Linda Lovelace, star of the notorious 1972 sex flick Deep Throat who later turned antiporn activist, of injuries from a car crash; in Denver, Colorado (see Eulogy). DIED. PAM BAKER, 71, gutsy lawyer and human rights activist; in Macclesfield, England. Baker spent 19 years in Hong Kong championing the rights of battered women and underprivileged mainlanders as well as trying to secure refugee status for Vietnamese boat people. HONORED. PAU GASOL, 21, as the National...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Person of the Week | 4/29/2002 | See Source »

...compete at the highest level possible, the team travels to tournaments in San Diego, North Carolina and Georgia. It gets to face nationally ranked teams in Stanford, Duke, UC-San Diego, Colorado and Oregon. But these trips naturally come at a cost—a cost that is not covered by funding from the University, save...

Author: By Nicole J. Meunier, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Ultimate Frisbee Looks To Make Nationals From Tangled Northeast | 4/26/2002 | See Source »

Both DeGette and Kennedy endorse the idea of accrediting IRBs. But they are split on whether accreditation should be mandatory. So far, Kennedy is saying yes. DeGette, who has championed patient protection in part because the University of Colorado was severely sanctioned by OHRP in 1999, thinks a voluntary system would, paradoxically, protect patients better. "The whole point of accreditation," says DeGette, "is to encourage research institutions to reach for a higher bar, to go above and beyond the minimum requirements...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: At Your Own Risk | 4/22/2002 | See Source »

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