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...prescription drugs weighing on patients, states that wind up with part of the tab are taking action to help consumers lower their bills. Illinois announced last week that it plans to set up a website and toll-free phone number to help residents buy cheaper prescriptions from Canada, Ireland and Britain. That program, which Illinois estimates will cut prices 25% to 50%, follows in the footsteps of ones already in place in Minnesota, Wisconsin, New Hampshire and North Dakota. Meanwhile, New York launched a website last week that enables its residents to compare the prices of the most commonly prescribed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Money: Finding Cheaper Prescriptions | 8/30/2004 | See Source »

...share power, the Nazis will be forced to "launch our version of Sinn Fein to keep talking to the government and our version of the I.R.A. to practice terror." This disturbed young man is grossly misinformed. The I.R.A. was not attempting to wipe out the Unionist population of Northern Ireland, but fought a guerrilla war against the British army to attain Irish sovereignty in the North. To compare the conflict in Northern Ireland with the twisted ideologies of the emerging fascist right in the new Russia is nonsense. Mark Eiffe Cork City, Ireland Your article on young Nazis in Russia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 8/24/2004 | See Source »

...ensure winning results year after year. Man U was the first to launch a U.S. strategy, teaming with the New York Yankees in a joint marketing deal. It even issues an American Man U Master Card. Another team reaching into the U.S. is Celtic, long the home club of Ireland's diaspora. "We've got a million fans in North America," says David McNally, the club's sales director. This summer fans can see the Hoops in action and send their kids to Celtic soccer camps. But Celtic has its eye on an even bigger market: the 20 million Yanks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Americans Love Glasgow Celtic? | 8/9/2004 | See Source »

...days the scientific grapevine had been buzzing with the news that Stephen Hawking, the brilliant physicist whose disease has put him in a wheelchair, heir to the revered Cambridge professorship once held by Isaac Newton, would be making a big announcement at a conference in Dublin, Ireland. Sure enough, last week before an array of TV cameras and hundreds of colleagues at the ordinarily obscure International Conference of General Relativity and Gravitation, Hawking declared that he had solved what he called "a major problem in theoretical physics." Black holes, he said, do not forever annihilate all traces of what falls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hawking Cries Uncle | 8/2/2004 | See Source »

Sarah M. Seltzer '05, an English concentrator affiliated with Lowell House, is the editor of Fifteen Minutes, The Crimson's weekend magazine. After leaving France last summer, she headed to Ireland for the fall 2003 semester in order to continue her in-depth study of religious conflict and beer...

Author: By Sarah M. Seltzer, | Title: Unblind to Faith | 7/23/2004 | See Source »

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