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...race in ninth place after righting the boat. The B division crew, after placing third and second in their first two races, did not finish. Races were suspended for the rest of the day following the squall, which damaged several of the boats, cutting down the size of the fleet to 16 for Sunday. “They did an amazing job getting one fleet together so we could race again on Sunday,” Wareham said. “Some boats had parts missing and broken masts.” The weather was more agreeable on the second...

Author: By Nick Traverse, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Squalls Buffet Crimson Sailors | 3/11/2008 | See Source »

...some 80 foreign journalists (three times the number that accompanied then Secretary of State Madeline Albright for her meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in late 2000) rolled past building after building that was unlit in the late afternoon gloom; pedestrians on the streets stared as the fleet of buses rolled into the heart of energy-starved Pyongyang. Every half kilometer or so along a 25-kilometer route into town, female traffic cops stood stiffly at attention, wearing fur-lined hats and carrying batons they could, theoretically, use to direct traffic; if, that is, there actually...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Gershwin Offensive in North Korea | 2/25/2008 | See Source »

...Days earlier, Carlson said that today's U.S. Air Force "simply cannot fight and win against the fleet of airplanes that have been developed and are flying in India, China, and so forth," a claim questioned by many experts. But his view has been reinforced by the companies employing 25,000 workers in 44 states building the F-22 - the prime contractor is aerospace giant Lockheed Martin - and their allies in Congress. That is what is so insidious about these lists: once Congress gets a hold of them, they're used as pile drivers to pound extra billions into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Air Force Reaches for the Sky | 2/22/2008 | See Source »

...latest in British aerial fighting gear: vertical-takeoff Harrier attack aircraft and Sea King helicopters. Some 2,000 Royal Marines, the nucleus of an assault group, were also aboard the ships. Once out on the Atlantic, the carriers were joined by destroyers, frigates and support vessels until the fleet numbered close to 30. Running at night under blackout conditions, the largest British military armada since World War II began its long, slow voyage toward the South Atlantic. Far ahead of surface ships, nuclear-powered attack submarines already prowled the waters around the fleet's destination, the barren and windswept Falkland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Face-Off on the High Seas | 2/20/2008 | See Source »

...British fleet set sail, Thatcher regained some of her customary fire. Her basic position was that Britain would not negotiate until the Argentines withdrew. "We have to recover those islands," she declared in a television interview. Evoking Queen Victoria's words from the "black week" of December 1899, when attacking British forces were being repulsed in the Boer War, she declaimed: "Failure? The possibilities do not exist. I'm not talking about failure. I am talking about supreme confidence in the British fleet, superlative troops, excellent equipment. We must use all our professionalism, our flair, every single bit of native...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Face-Off on the High Seas | 2/20/2008 | See Source »

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