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...American landing until Charles Lindbergh set down there more than 150 years later. Instantly Franklin was surrounded, celebrated, applauded in the streets and theaters. He spoke, and Paris purred. His likeness blossomed everywhere, on clocks and rings and walking sticks. Terra-cotta Franklin medallions were served up by the thousand but could not satisfy the demand. The portraitists wore him out. He could be held responsible for a riotous explosion of bad poetry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Winning a Wartime Ally: Making France Our Best Friend | 7/7/2003 | See Source »

Beginning in late June of each year, the fields of USNA are as frantic as downtown Annapolis is calm. I’m not alone as I jog along the seawall with the Chesapeake Bay Bridge in the distance—there are more than a thousand men and women far sweatier than I. These are the plebes: newly-minted high school graduates going into their first-year as midshipmen in the Naval Academy brigade. While their high school classmates spend the summer tanning, they head off to Annapolis for Plebe Summer. “Start your days at dawn...

Author: By Kristi L. Jobson, | Title: We Want You in the Navy, Too | 7/3/2003 | See Source »

...obvious domestic political reasons, the Bush Administration going into the war had downplayed the scale and duration of a post-war occupation mission. When then-Army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki told legislators that such a mission would require several hundred thousand U.S. troops, his assessment had been immediately dismissed by Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz as "wildly off the mark." Wolfowitz explained that "I am reasonably certain that (the Iraqi people) will greet us as liberators, and that will help us to keep requirements down." Six weeks ago, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld was still suggesting the U.S. force...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq: When Can We Go Home? | 6/26/2003 | See Source »

...expanded by Bill Clinton. Fraud no doubt exists, and fraud is bad. But the money to be gained here is minuscule compared with, say, the estimated $20 billion lost each year from American companies that set up offshore headquarters to avoid taxation. (The Administration says it is hiring a thousand more agents to go after upper-income cheats.) Finally, the centerpiece of Bush's social policy--his bill supporting faith-based programs--collapsed, according to the now departed DiIulio, because the White House was more interested in a bill that pleased the Evangelical right than a compromise that might have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Blessed Are the Poor--They Don't Get Tax Cuts | 6/9/2003 | See Source »

...ground guarantee that an attack on South Korea would automatically bring U.S. intervention?may soon be gone. Last week, Seoul and Washington announced U.S. troops will pull back at least 50 km to bases south of Seoul over the next few years. It makes military sense?a few thousand grunts were never going to block an invasion by the 1.1 million-strong North Korean military. And in an era of precision-guided munitions, officials insist the pullback won't undermine the U.S.-South Korean defense alliance?or send the wrong signal to Pyongyang. Says Lieut. Colonel Steven Boylan, a spokesman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Korea: Run DMZ | 6/9/2003 | See Source »

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