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...RIAA, this is not a happy future. "The $40 billion music industry's business," says TIME business writer Karl Taro Greenfeld, "is evolving, painfully, from selling products to simply providing a service. Selling compact discs was viable as long as the companies controlled the quantity and destiny of that music." Not any more. The question for the industry is how it can still get a slice, how to make sure that all the money they spend on starmaking doesn't disappear down some college kid's hard drive. And that's where the lawyers come in. Suits against Napster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Lawyers Will Soon Be Nipping at Napster | 6/13/2000 | See Source »

...glitches the status of women was slowly improving. One of the last hurdles to official equality, the fixed male-female ratio, fell with remarkable speed in the spring of 1975. In one semester, an equal access plan--proposed by a faculty committee led by Leverett Professor of Physics Karl Strauch--was approved by the Faculty, Bok and the University's governing boards, the Corporation and the Board of Overseers...

Author: By Eli M. Alper, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Quiet Time for Activism | 6/6/2000 | See Source »

...DIED. KARL SHAPIRO, 86, poet whose V-Letter and Other Poems, written while he was in New Guinea during World War II, won the 1945 Pulitzer Prize; in New York City. Shapiro's profile dimmed following his early success, but he remained an iconoclast, blasting T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound as detriments to poetry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones May 29, 2000 | 5/29/2000 | See Source »

...warfare there is a response for almost any development. Other European states adopted the French military model and, working together, defeated Napoleon. The forces of industrial-age war had been unleashed. As noted by Karl von Clausewitz, the foremost military observer of the era, war in theory knows no limits and thus tends naturally to the extreme application of violence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Will We Fight? | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

Every journalist has a novel in him, said Karl Kraus, and if he's smart, he'll keep it there. Countless potboilers by deadline drudges have proved the wisdom of Kraus' pitiless warning. But with Primary Colors in 1996, Joe Klein made himself an exception to the rule. Klein's first novel managed to survive the gimmickry of its initial publication. It was released, as the world will recall, under the byline Anonymous, making Guess the Author a favorite parlor game along the Washington-Manhattan media axis. With its deft plotting, crackling dialogue and a raft of engaging characters, thinly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Searching for That Sting | 5/1/2000 | See Source »

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