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...When Lucentis is approved, it is doubtful Americans will continue to use Avastin for AMD - even though the cheaper drug has worked so well that some 30 states now cover it for macular-degeneration treatment, says Rosenfeld. Doctors predict patients will go for the drug that has the FDA imprimatur, as long as insurance companies pick up the higher cost. Doctors too will most likely turn to the more expensive drug. "Let's just say there's a bad outcome," says Dr. John Sorenson, an AMD expert in New York City. "You can already hear the lawyers say, 'Doctor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Retina Drug Prompts Big Hopes ? and Potentially Big Costs | 6/29/2006 | See Source »

...know, the cost of Harvard's meal plan does not cover the added expense of operating Harvard's only kosher kitchen here at Harvard Hillel. Students do not pay extra to eat here. All along, Harvard Hillel has been paying for this cost difference; however, we find ourselves in a budget crisis and can no longer afford to assume this responsibility. Harvard College has not and will not pick up the added cost which is why we are turning to you, to ask for your support in helping Harvard Hillel continue to provide our kosher food program. This program...

Author: By Judy Z. Herbstman | Title: Letter from Hillel Undergraduate Steering Committee President Judy Z. Herbstman '07 | 6/27/2006 | See Source »

...issue. We commissioned pieces from the historian Paul Kennedy and some of Roosevelt's most prominent recent biographers, including Kathleen Dalton, Candice Millard and Patricia O'Toole. Presidential adviser Karl Rove sent in his story Friday morning, and it instantly became the endpiece of the package. The striking cover portrait is by the artist Michael J. Deas, who has now painted four of our Making of America cover images. D.W. Pine designed the splendid-looking package, Jackson Dykman created the one-of-a-kind graphics, Jay Colton was tireless in finding distinctive pictures, and reporters Andrea Dorfman and Deirdre...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why History Matters | 6/26/2006 | See Source »

...laundry strung on bamboo poles" and "rattan birdcages" to the smells of "dried oysters, clove hair oil, joss, [and] tiger balm" in the streets of Hong Kong. But politics are inescapable and an expatriate's distance increasingly difficult to retain. Their father, a photographer at TIME magazine assigned to cover the Vietnam War, has moved to Hong Kong from New York with the idea that, "Hong Kong would be safer than Saigon; an old-fashioned British enclave." He and his family soon find that nowhere is safe. The girls hear from their amah about the turmoil in their looming neighbor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World In Between | 6/26/2006 | See Source »

...America's Interstate system - the largest civil engineering project in human history - is actually substantively complete. And now that it is, we can begin to comprehend its scope and impact. After we've spread enough asphalt and concrete and acquired enough right-of-way to cover the entire surface of the state of Delaware, we can begin to comprehend how this sprawling 75 m.p.h. planet of concrete, asphalt, steel and white-line-paint has changed America - both the way we live and how we view our nation. Like some vast, caffeine-propelled external manifestation of our collective nervous system, these...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Interstates Turn 50 | 6/26/2006 | See Source »

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