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...soiled kid's bag, a creaky elevator, leaks from the ceiling: not the sort of phenomena likely to scare movie audiences out of their seats. But the great horror films have always laced the stuff of ordinary life with a dose of terror, for the deepest fears derive not from the wildly grotesque, but from the slightly twisted familiar. Terror is a thing of the mind, not the eyes, and the line between mundane normality and unbridled horror can be as thin as that between dusk and night...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Japanese Water Torture | 7/1/2002 | See Source »

...always been pragmatic about the nonessentials, accommodating itself to new cultures, to old customs and to social change. It once conducted Masses solely in Latin; now it doesn't. Communion was once dispensed solely by the priest; now lay people can distribute it. Even some of the deepest and oldest rituals in Catholic life--like the Easter Vigil ceremony--were imported in part from pagan rituals. In Africa and Asia, all kinds of cultural accommodations are made to bring the faith across cultures and into people's hearts. If this can be done for the Third World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Says the Church Can't Change? | 6/17/2002 | See Source »

...easy access to the U.S. Both the al Muhajir instance and the case of shoe-bomber Richard Reid suggest that some of the volunteers who found their way to al-Qaeda from Western countries after brushes with the law were kept at arm's length from the organization's deepest networks. U.S. officials told the Washington Post that al Muhajir was not part of Zubaydah's inner circle, and that they were able to find him even though the Bin Laden lieutenant had alluded to the American only in "generic terms" - although, presumably, there aren't too many Puerto Ricans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The 'Dirty Bomb' Suspect: Lots of Questions, Few Answers | 6/11/2002 | See Source »

...Harvard is blessed with the broadest and deepest assembly of intellectual talent and academic resources in the world,” Yale’s Levin said last year...

Author: By Nicole B. Usher, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Reinventing the Wheel | 6/6/2002 | See Source »

...living wage’s opposition began to erode the thin veneer of liberalism that shrouds Harvard’s deepest secret—its inner core of fiscal conservatism. Yes, students at the college are liberal, but only socially. But being liberal is more than supporting women’s equality or gay rights. To be truly liberal and progressive, you’d better be willing to toss aside more than just your parents’ stodgy views on race in America. You’ve got to toss aside corporate profits, individual wealth and, yes, rational minimum...

Author: By C. MATTHEW Macinnis, | Title: Thank God for the Living Wage | 6/6/2002 | See Source »

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