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While eating a tofurkey sandwich one day in London, Mark L. Nuckols had a brilliant idea. “If you can make tofu that tastes like turkey,” he says, “why not tofu that tastes like human flesh?” A year and a half later, Nuckols developed Hufu, a vegan, tofu-based food product that he calls the “healthy human flesh alternative.” Nuckols, a student at the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth University, brushed up on his cannibal literature to perfect the flavor...

Author: By Elizabeth M. Doherty, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Pushing the Culinary Barrier | 11/30/2005 | See Source »

...certain where this fascination with white skin originated. Thakur and Goenka point to pale-faced conquerors from Britain and central Asia who forcefully instilled a reverence for whiteness. Cultural conservatives complain Hollywood is pushing aside Indian heroes in favor of Westerners all too ready to display their pale flesh. Some sociologists argue that in a country where most people still farm, dark skin is associated with lowly labor in the outdoors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letter From Bombay: Could You Please Make Me a Shade Lighter? | 11/28/2005 | See Source »

...unlikely that Bush will ever consummate his flirtation with the anti-immigrant right. It's too big a departure from his history, and too many Big Business G.O.P. donors need their cheap labor. "Bush decided to give these guys"--the immigration hard-liners--"their rhetorical pound of flesh," says a Republican official close to the White House. "In return, he wants a comprehensive bill, which is what he has always wanted. He's just going to lead with a lot of noise about border security...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Playing Both Sides of the Fence | 11/27/2005 | See Source »

...child soldier hidden in the bush, machete in his hand, insects crawling slowly across his exposed flesh, is waiting for the order to kill. “You want to be a soldier enh? Well—kill him. KILL HIM NOW!”This sort of guttural visceral action characterizes the majority of Uzodinma Iweala ’04’s “Beasts of No Nation”; the rapturously reviewed debut novel is the story of Agu, a child soldier in an unnamed African country. “Beasts” was originally written...

Author: By Bianca M. Stifani, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Beasts of No Nation | 11/19/2005 | See Source »

That is bound to strike some as America bashing; the attempts to flesh out terrorists, excuse making. But making them human shows us they are not superhuman: they make mistakes, they get emotional, they have doubts. Each of them may, at some point, be stopped. In Paradise Now, from Palestinian director Hany Abu-Assad, Said (Kais Nashif) seems like an ordinary slacker auto mechanic until he is chosen to undertake a suicide bombing, which he volunteered for long before. Said comes across not as a news-article composite but as a believable, mixed-up young...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Terrorists Get Their Close-Up | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

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