Word: raymonde
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...West Wing's win for best drama - since even many of its fans thought it had a subpar year - you shouldn't have been. When it comes to picking Emmy winners, there's no substitute for old-fashioned cynicism. Phil Rosenthal, accepting the best comedy trophy for Everybody Loves Raymond, said it all: Emmys do not go to hip, edgy shows. And the Emmys (decided largely by people who make their livings in un-hip, un-edgy network TV) do not give series awards to cable shows. So what if The West Wing stank last year? It takes the Emmy...
...want to be buried by multinationals will have no choice but to compete globally?and make original medicines themselves. "It's their fear of losing the domestic market post-2005 that's driving (Indian companies) to expand overseas," says Ashit Kothari, an analyst at brokerage firm ASK Raymond James. Dr. Reddy's Prasad admits, "Beyond 2005, growth will suffer in India...
...There are signs, too, that the expansion of Indian companies into America might get harder. For one thing, the constant court battles that are required when challenging patents are exorbitantly expensive by Indian standards. "Profit margins at some companies are declining because of litigation costs," says Kothari from ASK Raymond James. Even when a court case is won, the life of a generic-drug company is never easy: high profit margins last for just the six months that the company has an exclusive right to sell a generic drug. If India's drugmakers are to become truly global, they...
Sure, the family seems dysfunctional on TV, but behind the scenes at the sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond, things are really dysfunctional. Brad Garrett, far left, who plays Raymond's sad-sack brother Robert, isn't happy about his reported $160,000-an-episode salary, and he hasn't shown up for work since the show started filming its upcoming season last week. The producers had to write him out of the first episode. The show's star, Ray Romano, left, who makes $1.8 million per half-hour of TV time, has said, "I want everybody to get what they deserve...
...highly subject to interpretation. They point out that Jesus and the Apostles saw themselves as Jews; John's wholesale condemnation of the faith, they speculate, may reflect Christian-Jewish rancor in A.D. 95, when that Gospel was written, more than the politics of Jesus' era. The great Catholic scholar Raymond Brown concluded upon meticulous examination that the "blood on our children" line was a specific group's oath of responsibility rather than an assumption of eternal, racial guilt...