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...Some of the institutions will come up with a longer list of missing items after this meeting,” Brainard said. By comparing the edges of maps and damage to the paper the maps were printed on, the libraries’ representatives hope to determine what map belongs to what book—and thus to what library, she said. Harvard released a list last Friday of 13 maps missing from its collection. Smiley has admitted to stealing only eight of those maps, and the whereabouts of the remaining five remains a mystery. But Harvard is certain that Smiley...

Author: By Brittney L. Moraski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: New Twist In Smiley Case | 8/4/2006 | See Source »

...India is home to the second largest Muslim population in the world, around 150 million people. But in a nation of more than a billion people, Muslims are often a disadvantaged minority. In the eyes of many Hindus, no Muslim can ever truly belong in India. The origins of this antagonism are centuries old. In essence, hardline Hindus regard as a national humiliation the Islamic influence that pervades India's history, starting with the Mughal Renaissance in the 16th century, continuing with the birth of Islamic fundamentalism in Asia in northern India in the 1860s (the same creed followed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who's Behind the India Bombings? | 7/11/2006 | See Source »

...powered by both wind and a steam-engine powered iron-screw propeller. Such vessels were rare, if not unknown, in these waters and, as the ship drew closer and they could see that she was flying a U.S. flag, speculation turned to her identity. Some thought the ship might belong to the Western Union Telegraph Expedition, yet another expression of America's ongoing commercial expansion which continued even as the country was rent by civil war. That year the Expedition was conducting surveys for a cable to be stretched across the Bering Strait; the project sought to create a communications...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Odyssey of the Shenandoah | 6/26/2006 | See Source »

...Boreal dawns, ice floes, and burning whaleships hardly belong to our usual mental repository of Civil War images. Such scenes evoke Moby Dick more than they do The Red Badge of Courage. That the Shenandoah captured those ten whaling vessels in the Bering Strait more than two months after General Lee's surrender at Appomattox Courthouse adds only more incongruity. But on June 28, 1865, the obvious ironies, much like Davis' solace, meant nothing to the men gathered off this Arctic shore. For the whalemen and the owners of the destroyed ships, the consequences were tragic. For Waddell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Odyssey of the Shenandoah | 6/26/2006 | See Source »

...nonverbal forms of contact too. As revealed last week, a U.S. deal with an international banking consortium, SWIFT, lets intelligence officials look at the financial transactions of suspected terrorists. In its pursuit of serious jihadists with moneyed connections abroad (a category the FBI admits Seas of David does not belong in) the program, run out of the CIA, targets millions of bank transfers, some of which appear to have involved U.S. residents, or even U.S. citizens, and many others that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Jihadi Next Door? | 6/25/2006 | See Source »

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