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President Bush s security briefings discussed al Qaeda at least 40 times before Sept. 11, and Mr. Bush understood the threat from the terrorist network, national security adviser Condoleezza Rice on Thursday told the panel investigating the 2001 attacks..But one commissioner questioned whether a pre-Sept. 11 warning gave hints of the coming attack.Rice s much anticipated testimony was being televised nationally by CBS News, and webcast live on CBSNews. Her remarks were an effort to rebut claims by former counterterrorism director Richard Clarke, who claims the Bush administration in general mdash; and Rice in particular mdash; ignored his warnings about al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden. There was no silver bullet that could have prevented the 9/11 attacks, Rice said. If anything might have helped stop 9/11, Rice
stanley us continued, it would have been better information about threats inside the United States, something made difficult by structural and legal impediments that prevented the
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stanley italia by our law enforcement and intelligence agencies. Commissioner Richard Ben-Veniste engaged in a testy exchange with Rice over one pre-Sept. 11 intelligence report mdash; the president s Aug. 6, 2001 presidential daily brief.Rice said the briefing was prepared because the president wanted to know about possible threats to the United States, amid an increase in threat reports pointing to attacks overseas.Rice said the reports did discuss the threat of a Vyvs What Breaking Bad s color palette tells us about its characters
Though many physicists believe it possible that our universe is one of many in a multiverse, they struggle to find concrete evidence to b
stanley becher ack up that hypothesis. But now, we may find that evidence 鈥?if we look for the wreckage left behind by a collision of cosmic proportions. Ill
stanley termosar ustration by Olena Shmahalo Over at Quanta, Jennifer Oullette explores one experiment that could provide evidence for the multiverse. It assumes that our universe was born during a collision with another universe 鈥?and that this dramatic event may have left a cosmic imprint behind that we can measure. Writes Oullette: Like many of her colleagues, Hiranya Peiris, a cosmologist at University College London, once largely dismissed the notion that our
stanley cups universe might be only one of many in a vast multiverse. It was scientifically intriguing, she thought, but also fundamentally untestable. She preferred to focus her research on more concrete questions, like how galaxies evolve. Then one summer at the Aspen Center for Physics, Peiris found herself chatting with the Perimeter Institute Matt Johnson, who mentioned his interest in developing tools to study the idea. He suggested that they collaborate. At first, Peiris was skeptical. I think as an observer that any theory, however interesting and elegant, is seriously lacking if it doesn ;t have testable consequences, she said. But Johnson convinced her that there might be a way to test the concept. If the universe that we i