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Horowitz said the CIA can’t easily recruit at Harvard because of liberal pressure—if students do join they are made to “feel unclean about defending their own country...

Author: By Margaretta E. Homsey, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Horowitz Blames Liberals for Terrorism | 3/15/2002 | See Source »

...larded with Russian specialists left over from the cold war, even as the agency struggles to recruit and train officers with proficiency in other tongues. In last year's graduating class of case officers, just 20% had usable skills in non-Romance languages. When the war in Afghanistan began, the CIA had only one Afghan analyst. As TIME reported last month, American intelligence agents in Kabul almost blew the chance to question a top-ranking Taliban minister, who may have had information on the hiding place of Mullah Omar. The spooks had yet to hire a Dari translator...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can We Stop The Next Attack? | 3/11/2002 | See Source »

...inevitably face each other over the negotiating table again. But neither side appears to have yet exhausted its capacity for upping the ante. What has changed is the Bush administration's diplomatic priorities, given its focus on going after Saddam Hussein. As Vice President Cheney heads out to recruit support for action against Iraq, an administration pilloried by Arab states for passivity in the face of the Middle East meltdown has new incentive to do whatever it can to douse the fires...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Sharon is Talking About Talks | 3/8/2002 | See Source »

Continuing her effort to recruit students to her campaign, Green Party gubernatorial candidate Jill E. Stein ’73 said grassroots democracy is the key to Massachusetts’ future in a campus talk yesterday...

Author: By Christopher M. Loomis, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Greens Host Stein Talk | 3/6/2002 | See Source »

...make patients aware of the parts of their bodies that they cannot sense," says Sinkjaer, who has worked with Brian Holgersen for the past six years, "and use sensory information from the skin to control the hand automatically as in able-bodied subjects." This kind of sensitive prosthetic would recruit afferent nerves to send tactile information from paralyzed limbs to other parts of the body, where the sensations could be perceived. With such a device Holgersen might feel the weight of a freshly brewed cup of coffee as a tingling sensation on his cheek; the heavier the cup, the more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Body Electric | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

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