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North Korea in multilateral settings but it is in no mood to offer carrots. Hence diplomacy does not look hopeful. The Bush Administration seems inclined to find ways of pressuring North Korea—by urging the Chinese to cut aid, by interdicting North Korea’s illicit traffic in arms and drugs—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...

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

Catherine Ikels remembered that when she was an undergraduate at Radcliffe in the early 1960s, her father often worked the front desk at the HUPD headquarters, which was then in the basement of Grays Hall, dealing with traffic tickets and stolen bikes...

Author: By Garrett M. Graff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Former HUPD Officer Dies at 93 | 5/7/2003 | See Source »

...truest sign of fear is the sound of silence. In Beijing, a city whose freeway-size avenues usually over-flow with packed buses and armies of bicycles, there are no traffic jams anymore. Restaurants and shopping malls resemble abandoned movie sets, their windows shuttered and doors chained shut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tale Of Two Countries | 5/5/2003 | See Source »

After completing a law degree, Nouman took a job as a criminal investigator at the Justice Ministry. Later she pursued a doctorate at the Sorbonne. Her studies were cut short in 1985, when she broke a hip in a traffic accident. Back in Baghdad, she began to take on criminal cases, mostly pro bono. That's how she came upon Naadi, a young Egyptian bellhop who had crossed Uday Hussein. Naadi was being held at a police station and being tortured even as Nouman waited to see him. "They were touching his fingers with a live wire, and I could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forever A Prisoner | 5/5/2003 | See Source »

...away his exclusive distribution deals with British and American toolmakers. After completing a law degree, Nouman took a job as a criminal investigator at the Justice Ministry. Later she pursued a doctorate at the Sorbonne. Her studies were cut short in 1985, when she broke a hip in a traffic accident. Back in Baghdad, she began to take on criminal cases, mostly pro bono. That's how she came upon Naadi, a young Egyptian bellhop who had crossed Uday Hussein. Naadi was being held at a police station and being tortured even as Nouman waited to see him. "They were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forever A Prisoner | 5/4/2003 | See Source »

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