Word: heals
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...ORLEANS: Sallie Ann Glassman, the city's best-known voodoo high priestess, says she cured herself of breast cancer last month. She promises to heal you of your discomforts?spiritual, physical, psychological and social?starting at $100 a treatment...
...November, public response has been lukewarm at best. All came from what might be called the therapeutic school of memorial design. They spoke a language of serenity and simplicity, consoling but minor key, inadequate to the power of the event they were marking. Every one of them sought to heal the pain of 9/11. None of them evoked the horror that brought...
Should a memorial expose the scars of 9/11, or should it heal them? Can it do both? Arad may have hoped that the serenity of his design would appeal to the families of victims, who have pressed for a place to quietly mourn their dead. But when his plan was chosen last week, the Coalition of 9-11 Families, an umbrella group, declared it "uninspiring" and called for a new competition. Some family groups have actually been pressing for a more anguished memorial that would incorporate twisted remnants of the towers that are currently in storage. They look to places...
...yours. Her clients range from the terminally ill to folks just searching for answers. Sessions in person or over the phone start from $60 New Orleans: Sallie Ann Glassman, the city's best-known voodoo high priestess, says she cured herself of breast cancer last month. She promises to heal you of your discomforts - spiritual, physical, psychological and social - starting at $100 a treatment Hong Kong: A favorite of local celebrities and socialites, ponytailed Peter So Man-fung is a feng shui master who has a propensity to appear in local movies and at hip nightclubs. He'll rearrange your...
...rejection was unsurprising. Iranian parliamentary elections are Feb. 20, and dominant hard-line clerics are worried that friendly American behavior might aid reformers, who are less anti-Western than the conservatives. The Administration is left with the same sort of New Year's solace as its medical team: you heal the Baseejist not because he likes you but because he is another human being. And who knows? Somewhere down the line he may remember the favor. --Reported by Thomas Erdbrink/Bam and Douglas Waller/Washington