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...price of admission to the Beatrice Street Y is equivalent to one New York subway ride. The profound emotions shaping South Africa come with no extra charge. The performance is in Zulu, but spectators with no understanding of the language can grasp the feeling. Evocative words such as "AIDS," "lover boy," "our parliament" and "Mandela" are at the foreground. Hope and gloom duel in the background. Isicathamiya is South Africa's blues...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Zulu Blues | 3/9/2001 | See Source »

...giant gate where Denham waits with something called "gas bombs." Kong is KO'd, brought back to NYC where he is put on display. Photographers stir him up: "Stop! He thinks you're attacking the girl!" He breaks through his chains in a fearsome rage, trashes an elevated subway train, eats a man in a pin-stripe suit, and plucks a young woman right out of her bed. She's no Ann, though, and he drops her - literally. Somehow he finds Ann and takes her to the top of the Empire State Building. He puts her down and biplanes attack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Monkey On My Back | 3/9/2001 | See Source »

Unfortunately, Hogg uses 300 pages of cute anecdotes, acronyms (S.L.O.W. means "Stop, Listen, Observe, What's Up?") and silly charts to convey her advice. One chart, on "translating body language," offers the revelation that if your baby looks "like a person falling asleep on a subway," then she's "tired." In many other ways, Hogg's advice sounds obvious. Not only have people like my Aunt Lena been dispensing this kind of wisdom for generations, but also Dr. Spock first published it in Baby and Child Care in 1945. For me, his famous first sentences, "Trust yourself. You know more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Translating Babies | 3/5/2001 | See Source »

...KEIZO OBUCHI July 30, 1998?April 4, 2000 Lowest approval rating: 21% Memorable achievement: Upon hearing of Japan's first fatal subway accident, proceeded to salon for emergency hair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wanted: One Prime Minister | 3/4/2001 | See Source »

...wanted to deliver a weapon of mass destruction to the U.S., it would most likely forgo missiles for less risky and more destructive methods. The danger of chemical or biological attack on major cities by terrorist groups is well documented; in 1995, a nerve gas attack on a Japanese subway left 12 commuters dead and could have threatened many more. Such attacks are warning signs that U.S. policy should concentrate less on the Cold War calculus of missiles and bombs and more on the threat of biological and chemical attacks on American cities...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Wrong Way on Missile Defense | 3/1/2001 | See Source »

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