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...beer lover hoping to jump on the bandwagon ought first to take a lesson from Beer School, Hindy and Potter's recent book about how they built their company. Microbreweries had their own version of the dotcom boom and bust in the early 1990s, when it seemed that a brew pub was opening (and soon closing) on every corner. The ones that survived "were willing to do the nitty-gritty hard work," says Ray Daniels, marketing director for craft beer at the Brewers Association, an industry trade group...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Beer Buddies | 2/7/2006 | See Source »

Death to Denmark? The whole affair seems to offer proof not only of chaos theory but also of Emily Post's dictum that you ought not to talk about religion--or to be prepared for anything if you do. To Muslims, the drawings were blasphemy, a violation of a cultural protocol not to portray the Prophet. The range of reactions to the cartoon's publication among Muslims and non-Muslims alike served as a reminder of the gaping divide that still exists between the West and much of the Islamic world. In a show of solidarity for their journalistic brethren...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Right to Offend? | 2/5/2006 | See Source »

...Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the burgeoning international conflict over a series of cartoons in a provincial Danish newspaper caricaturing the Prophet Muhammad seems to fit the term with depressing accuracy. It's a case of the hard-fought right to free expression banging up against Muslims' conviction that states ought to punish anyone who insults the Prophet. And so far, all the protagonists appear ready to ride their principles to Armageddon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: European-Arab Cartoon War Escalates | 2/2/2006 | See Source »

...project ought to be abandoned. It was a creature of the United States in the first place." RAMSEY CLARK, former U.S. Attorney General and member of Saddam Hussein's defense team, claiming that political pressures on the court make it difficult to hold a fair trial...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Verbatim | 1/29/2006 | See Source »

...jobs sure aren’t. At least since Harvard busted their union and outsourced their jobs to Allied Security, the biggest workers’ rights violator in the business. This company recently fired guards at UPenn for the crime of signing a petition saying they wanted a union.We ought to be able to beat UPenn at workers’ rights the way we beat Yale at football.Civil liberties and student privacy: 6 out of 10. As the federal government has taken liberties with our liberties, Harvard’s higher-ups have worked—though not hard enough?...

Author: By Michael Gould-wartofsky, | Title: Mass. Hall Gets Its Report Card | 1/22/2006 | See Source »

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