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Etymologies
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Examples
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A company called Cusac owned it and then Cusac finally ceased mining when the economics no longer worked.
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It was no surprise to Cusac when the Abu Ghraib story broke.
unknown title 2009
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It's been an issue ever since Puritan times; Cusac sees a culture fascinated by crime and punishment, pain and retribution.
unknown title 2009
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It was no surprise to Cusac when the Abu Ghraib story broke.
unknown title 2009
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Some of the most interesting chapters are later in the book, where Cusac analyzes the social upheaval of the 1960s, which lead, conversely, into fascination with crime, evil, even the devil in popular culture.
unknown title 2009
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Cusac returns to primary-source documents to detail what the norms for punishment were over the years, in prisons, but also throughout the rest of society, in schools, on shipboard, in the military, in slavery.
unknown title 2009
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The contest stayed tight as there were five ties and four lead changes in the third, often with Marshell and Cusac exchanging buckets.
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It's been an issue ever since Puritan times; Cusac sees a culture fascinated by crime and punishment, pain and retribution.
unknown title 2009
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Cusac, a former staff writer at The Progressive, builds on her reports over the years for that magazine to give a wide-angle view of imprisonment and punishment in the U.S.
unknown title 2009
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More often, Cusac argues, the feeling has been that evil is evil and needs punishment.
unknown title 2009
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