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...modern-day soldiers. “America’s at war, but does it really feel like that? None of us are actually threatened by the war in Iraq or Afghanistan immediately,” he said. “It’s a strange kind of distant war for all of us. But obviously, for the people who serve in it, it’s not distant.”But filming in South Central was more than just a chance to explore a different culture. For the English actor, it highlighted the vast differences in social...

Author: By Lindsay A. Maizel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Bale Gets Dirty for His 'Harsh' Role | 11/8/2006 | See Source »

Earlier peoples also believed their lives could be changed by distant, unseen beings. They called these entities angels, demons and gods. Today, the complex world that travel, communications and other technologies have created can likewise seem as if moved by mystic forces. If Lost is a jungle of quasi-shamanistic kismet, it resonates because our world appears that way too. In Babel, Heroes and their forebears--from Magnolia to the novels of Thomas Pynchon--even if the connections may be contrived, they feel authentic. That guy in the next car on the freeway could change my life someday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Intimate Strangers | 11/6/2006 | See Source »

Despite the unification of father and children, Hunt never felt a close connection with the oil baron, who was an emotionally distant and demanding lothario. However, it was her father who first introduced her to politics. H.L. Hunt espoused a doctrine of rabid anti-communism. He penned a utopian novel in which wealth dictated voting privileges, and he pressed his daughters into the service of his anti-communist crusade. “Making speeches with my father was the closest thing to a meaningful relationship we ever had,” the younger Hunt writes...

Author: By Carolyn F. Gaebler, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: From ‘Wright’ to Wealth: An Oil Heiress Tells Her Tale | 11/6/2006 | See Source »

Instead Haseeba recruited a distant cousin in Fallujah who was reputed to have contacts with the Sunni insurgency. His job was to inquire whether Waddah was being held by one of them. She was horrified when the cousin asked for a fee for that service: $1,000. He explained that the money was not for him but for his contacts. "I think he put most of it into his own pocket," she says. "But at that time, I could not afford to refuse." The days of waiting turned into weeks, and still there was no ransom demand. Some...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Disappeared of Iraq | 10/29/2006 | See Source »

...also has carefully escaped responsibility for the failures in Iraq. One retired senior army officer shook his head and said, "John has been unacceptably distant from the issue of Iraq." Abizaid has allowed Gen. George Casey, the Iraq commander, to take the heat as questions about strategy - over which he has the ultimate responsibility - are raised in Washington. As the Iraq war grinds on, senior officers who have served in Iraq are reaching their own conclusions about Abizaid's role. Said one Iraq veteran: "I don't think history will treat John Abizaid well...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criticism Mounts of U.S. Generals in Iraq | 10/27/2006 | See Source »

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