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CUSTOMER SERVICE AND SUBSCRIPTIONS * For 24/7 service, please use our website: www.time.com/customerservice You can also call 1-800-843-8463 or write to TIME at P.O. Box 30601, Tampa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Dec. 26, 2005 | 12/19/2005 | See Source »

CHANGE OF ADDRESS * Write to TIME, P.O. Box 30601, Tampa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Dec. 26, 2005 | 12/19/2005 | See Source »

...prism. For many on the right, it was more evidence that multiculturalism doesn't work - not with Muslims, anyway. For others, on the left, the Dec. 11 riot could be sheeted home to what they see as the federal government's demonization of Middle Eastern people, beginning with the "Tampa" election campaign of 2001 and continuing with its spirited defense of the mandatory detention of asylum seekers, Australia's participation in the invasion and occupation of Iraq, and draconian antiterrorism legislation. These people scoffed at Prime Minister John Howard's statement that the riot didn't expose racist sentiments among...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Culture War on the Beaches | 12/18/2005 | See Source »

That evidence, presented in a 2003 federal indictment, may well be damning stuff in the U.S. court of public opinion. But a Tampa jury has made it joltingly clear to the Bush Administration that praising terrorist acts, raising money for terrorists' widows or making an unaccepted offer to manage a terrorist group's money does not make a man a terrorist in a U.S. court of law. Handing the Justice Department one of its most embarrassing post-9/11 defeats, the jurors last week acquitted al-Arian, 47, on eight counts--including charges that he was Islamic Jihad's North...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Terror Charges Just Won't Stick | 12/12/2005 | See Source »

...turned up in Syria as head of Palestinian Islamic Jihad. Al-Arian maintained that he hadn't known of Shallah's involvement in the terrorist group and kept building an image of himself as an "enlightened Islamist" who led interfaith projects in Florida, gave women leadership positions at his Tampa mosque--and in the 2000 presidential campaign, stumped for George W. Bush because he found Bush more attuned than Al Gore to Arab-American issues. By then the FBI had told U.S.F. administrators it had nothing to charge al-Arian with, and the next year he attended an Arab-American...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Terror Charges Just Won't Stick | 12/12/2005 | See Source »

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