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...masterwork" and "of particular importance." When the bidding was over, No. 9 (White and Black on Wine) had sold for $16.4 million - a record for a Rothko at auction, as Christie's was quick to point out. What Christie's didn't trumpet was the identity of the seller: François Pinault, the self-made French billionaire whose holdings happen to include Christie's itself. The Rothko was in good company. Lot 39 at the same May 14 auction was a "beautiful and mesmerizing" Yves Klein work owned by Pinault that went for $5.3 million. A week earlier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Pinault's Big Sale | 6/8/2003 | See Source »

...actress - she doesn't radiate so much as glower - but just now she's everywhere in French movies, including two in the Cannes competition. In La Petite Lili, Claude Miller's summery adaptation of Chekhov's The Seagull, she disrupts the egos and libidos of all she meets. In François Ozon's Swimming Pool, she antagonizes and arouses older novelist Charlotte Rampling by sunbathing in the nude and bringing louts home to stay over. Neither film is a masterpiece, but both address the envy of old souls contemplating young flesh. Amid the cinematic dross, a jewel emerged: Sylvain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's a Lovely Day in Cannes And Life Is Rotten | 6/1/2003 | See Source »

Even by the standards of hardball lobbying, it's a startling claim: suicides will surge if a bill to restrain Medicaid spending on prescription drugs is passed. But that's what one lobbyist for Eli Lilly said to Minnesota state Rep. Fran Bradley's face recently. "My phone has rung off the hook with people telling me I'm going to cause a severalfold increase in suicides," said Bradley, a Republican who previously won awards from state mental-health advocates for his progressive legislation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Minnesota's Hard Medicaid Cuts | 4/28/2003 | See Source »

...Savimbi and Gabon President Omar Bongo, as well as to channel money to the two main French political parties. Pressed by Desplan, 47, the pugnacious presiding judge, Le Floch-Prigent described how Elf's payoffs in France first tilted toward the Gaullist party of Jacques Chirac until then-President François Mitterrand, a Socialist, personally summoned him to ask for "more balanced" treatment. Le Floch-Prigent and Sirven haven't named names, and Chirac himself has not been implicated in the case, but the sums are substantial. Le Floch-Prigent estimated Elf handed out about $5 million per year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gushing Greenbacks | 4/27/2003 | See Source »

...Landes Berlin (bkk) - a state health-insurance scheme - made unannounced home visits to workers in Berlin who had been off sick at least five times in the previous year, claiming minor ailments. Of the 65,000 people they visited, 53% were diagnosed as being fit for work. Says François de Closets, author of several books on anti-competitive attitudes in France: "There are people who take a day more or less unjustifiably and suddenly, well, another to have a long weekend." Of course, some workers are more likely to be absent than others, often for legitimate reasons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Absent Minded | 3/2/2003 | See Source »

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