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...their core businesses, IBM believes it can, in the words of a money manager who owns the stock, "wrap its arms around customers even more" by supplying IT seamlessly, on demand, on a variable, pay-as-you-go basis. J.P Morgan Chase bought Palmisano's pitch, as did American Express. But it's not yet clear how many others will be willing to hand over more control to IBM. And fine-tuning the technology to accurately measure and bill customers for their usage will be no small feat. But if Palmisano can pull it off, and finally make all those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: There's A New Way To Think Big Blue | 1/20/2003 | See Source »

There would also be a direct and tangible effect on the Harvard community if only five percent of the entering class took advantage of a possible two-year deferment. In peer discussions and social interaction these students would express their views, drawing on experience to form important cultural bridges. A tour in the service would also offer a temporary break from academia into a journey of self-discovery, while at the same time providing service to country and community. Something is lacking in this couch-potato era when tests of one’s fortitude are so rare that...

Author: By Richard C. Arthur, | Title: Letting Students Be Soldiers | 1/15/2003 | See Source »

...shop that he and a friend had patronized believed they had received bogus U.S. traveler's checks and alerted the police. A raid on the homes of Hamdani and his pal turned up an array of big-screen TVs and other luxury goods, $600,000 in forged American Express and Thomas Cook checks, a state-of-the-art counterfeiting operation complete with silk-screen equipment, ink stamps like those used by consular officials, and stacks of high-grade fake passports and other identity documents. Hamdani was tagged as the suspected mastermind. A Pakistani emigre, he had a rap sheet stretching...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Shadows in Our Midst | 1/13/2003 | See Source »

Perhaps the most truthful way to express that moral confusion is with a lie, a notion Kaufman explores not only in this script, which he wrote in 1997, but also in Adaptation. Kaufman has never met Barris and says he doesn't know if the CIA stories are true. "The first thing everybody asked me was, 'Is this true?'" Kaufman says. "That question interests me, whether in fiction or nonfiction." For the CIA's part, the only comment spokesman Paul Nowack would make was, "It's ridiculous. It's absolutely not true...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lying to Tell the Truth: CHUCK BARRIS | 1/13/2003 | See Source »

Here, the themes of the film emerge, as these individuals express what Moss calls “a kind of continuousness of values between then and now.” The film tries to reject the conventional portrayal of the hippie-gone-capitalist, instead suggesting that the river that embodied their youthful freedom still directs their lives in different ways...

Author: By Ben B. Chung, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: VES Lecturer’s Film Screens at Sundance | 1/10/2003 | See Source »

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