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...also true that news agents (or intelligent agents as they are sometimes called) aren't new at all. Sites such as the New York Times will electronically send out headlines based upon a reader's interests. Similarly, Amazon.com will suggest books based upon your past purchases. But Google doesn't care so much about your surfing habits. The search technology is predicated on the notion that what gets hit gets served. So Google's search results favor sites that get the most repeat traffic. Call it editorial judgment by dint of popular demand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Automatic for the People | 9/30/2002 | See Source »

Those who applaud the ban suggest it will model healthy behavior, and many celebrated the decision as a victorious springboard towards improving the health of students in southern California. Lack of soda in the schools’ vending machines, they argue, will reduce consumption of the unhealthy, sugar-and-sodium-laden drink, avail other beverage choices and change the way students think about food. But the change in no way prevents students from bringing soda from home or from consuming soda on campus. Many students in the urban Los Angeles school district already opt to eat off campus at lunch...

Author: By Jasmine J. Mahmoud, | Title: Pop pop, fizz fizz | 9/26/2002 | See Source »

...Qaeda members have returned to Afghanistan since the war. Even in neighboring Pakistan, al-Qaeda members aren't entirely secure. In some relatively lawless tribal areas that border Afghanistan, terrorists can hide--though the Pakistani army claims to be hunting them down. But last week's arrests suggest that the teeming slums of Lahore and Karachi may no longer be safe; the night before the raid on Binalshibh's safe house, according to a Pakistani law-enforcement official, intelligence operatives picked up 15 men for questioning on terrorist activities in raids on two neighborhoods in eastern Karachi. A Western diplomat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Al-Qaeda: Reeling Them In | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...calls "frustrated immigrants, drifters living on the margins of society, seekers of absolute truth or greater meaning for their lives" provide a rich field for terrorists to harvest. The cases of John Walker Lindh and Jose Padilla, coupled with the arrests in Lackawanna and earlier in Detroit and Oregon, suggest that the U.S. may already be facing the same phenomenon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Al-Qaeda: Reeling Them In | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...country. According to a federal complaint filed in Buffalo, C was read his Miranda rights and repeated most elements of Alwan's story. The agent pressed and, according to the complaint, C admitted "he had not been fully candid." (The FBI has rules against physical intimidation, but agents sometimes suggest to suspects abroad that cooperation is preferable to arrest in the country in which they've been nabbed.) C was read his rights a second time and started talking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Al-Qaeda: Breaking the Buffalo Five: Easy as A, B, C | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

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