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...while Saudis remain uninterested-or perhaps they're in a state of denial-in the level of Saudi participation in Sept. 11, the country seethes with open loathing for the U.S. and sympathy for bin Laden's cause. Signs of anti-Western militancy are rife throughout this vast kingdom, from the capital, Riyadh-where in June separate car bombs blew up a British banker outside his home and nearly killed an American expatriate-to Abha, a remote mountain city in the southern province of Asir, where four of the hijackers were raised and locals still celebrate all "the Fifteen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Do We Still Need the Saudis? | 7/28/2002 | See Source »

Anthony is one of those rare singers whose heavy smoking has enhanced his gifts. His voice, for all its range and power, has an unmistakable roughness that keeps it from sounding cold and technical. The lyrics on this album are rife with ho-hum avowals of loyalty in the Elvis vein: on I've Got You, Anthony gushes, "Baby, it's the way you love me/ That makes me so damn sure that you're the one." When Latin pop is this slick, Newport Light-stained imperfection is a welcome relief. --By Benjamin Nugent

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Mended | 5/27/2002 | See Source »

...bard of capitalism would scarcely recognize what California created as a "free market." The rules remained complex and rife with perverse incentives. The benefits to be gained from the system--taking advantage of its loopholes and stretching them wider--are all too obvious. Mike Aguirre, a San Diego lawyer who specializes in fraud and is representing California in one of its suits against Enron, took an energy-trading course in Houston last year in an enterprising bid to understand what the other side was being taught. There he learned Megawatt Laundering, or how to sell California its own electricity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: California Scheming | 5/20/2002 | See Source »

Siegel argued that U.S. stocks have outpaced inflation by nearly 7 percentage points annually with uncanny consistency since 1802. But his early numbers are rife with what statisticians call survivor bias: all the stocks in Siegel's pre-1871 index were winners, typically staying in business for at least 17 years. No flops such as canals or wooden turnpikes--just a couple of dozen profitable banks, insurers and railroads. Imagine calculating recent stock returns without Enron, Pets.com and Global Crossing. Would that give an accurate picture? Siegel says in his defense that survivor bias may overstate his 19th century numbers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Cause for Caution on Stocks | 5/6/2002 | See Source »

...central to his music as Bob Dylan’s. A bona fide emcee, J-Live grips the mic with the fire of a hungry artist and the self-assuredness of a professional. He flows like liquid, but his voice resonates with urgency and charisma. His songs are rife with lyrical invention: “One For The Griot” seems like a typical storytelling rap until someone in the studio complains about the violent ending, prompting him to rewind—twice—to come up with a better conclusion. “All In Together Now?...

Author: By Ryan J. Kuo, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Hip Hop: More Than Thugs and Gangstas | 4/26/2002 | See Source »

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