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...proved that he torqued up WMD evidence to serve his p.r. needs, he might even be pushed toward resignation. An intelligence official told the BBC that a dubious claim in the WMD dossier Blair released last September--that some of Saddam's troops were trained to deploy chemical weapons within 45 minutes--was penned in at the last minute by Downing Street aides. Another charge in the dossier, that Iraq was procuring tons of uranium from Africa, was quickly shown to be bogus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No WMD Spells Trouble For Tony | 6/9/2003 | See Source »

...will stay aloft to conduct atmospheric studies and a lander that will descend to the surface. Dubbed Beagle 2, after Charles Darwin's famous specimen-collecting ship, the lander is only 3 ft. wide when packed for flight, but on the ground it will open like a flower and deploy an impressive array of equipment. Among the instruments are a drill capable of digging 5 ft. below the surface, 12 ovens that can heat samples to some 1,600ŗF to generate carbon dioxide and a mass spectrometer to identify carbon isotopes, along with other elements. The lander can also measure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Destination Mars | 6/9/2003 | See Source »

...will stay aloft to conduct atmospheric studies and a lander that will descend to the surface. Dubbed Beagle 2, after Charles Darwin's famous specimen-collecting ship, the lander is only 91 cm wide when packed for flight, but on the ground it will open like a flower and deploy an impressive array of equipment. Among the instruments are a drill capable of digging 1.5 m below the surface, 12 ovens that can heat samples to some 870?C to generate carbon dioxide and a mass spectrometer to identify carbon isotopes, along with other elements. The lander can also measure ultraviolet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Destination Mars | 6/8/2003 | See Source »

...benefit of having a former cabinet member as University president is the hope that he would deploy his political resources to the benefit of his students,ā€¯ el-Gaili wrote...

Author: By Nathan J. Heller and Jessica R. Rubin-wills, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: In Trying Times, Harvard Takes Safe Road | 6/5/2003 | See Source »

...illicit traffic in arms and drugsā€”so that the crisis can be resolved by coercion rather than bribery. So far, though, Pyongyang has responded to pressure with escalation rather than concession. If neither diplomacy nor pressure succeeds, then the options are reduced to two: either deploy the military or live with a nuclear North Korea. Only one of these options is consistent with the Bush Doctrine. Here, then, is a classic public policy conundrum: one big problem, no good options. Only the credibility of the Bush doctrine and the security of the United States are at stake...

Author: By Steven E. Miller, | Title: Testing the Bush Doctrine | 5/9/2003 | See Source »

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