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...grown faster than spending on most other areas of health care. The bills currently being debated rely on market competition among HMOs and other managed care plans to contain the future cost of the new drug benefit, and the jury is still out on whether such an approach will succeed. If competition is not successful in containing costs, we are likely to see proposals for government regulation of prices, negotiated discounts from pharmaceutical companies, restricted formularies for what drugs can be used in given situations and efforts to encourage the importation of prescription drugs from countries like Canada, where government...

Author: By John M. Benson and Robert J. Blendon, S | Title: The New Drug Benefit Debate | 9/10/2003 | See Source »

Music being the most abstract of the popular arts, it is hard to know exactly why some bands succeed and others fail. This much we do know: Spoon was once a band teetering toward failure. It was the late '90s, and Spoon was playing competent post-punk in the tradition of Wire and the Pixies. And in the post-punk tradition, the group was widely ignored. After a two-month affiliation with a major label, Spoon had its contract revoked. The band was deemed not only hopelessly uncommercial but also hopelessly uninteresting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: These Guys Just Might Be Your New Favorite Band | 9/8/2003 | See Source »

...celluloid icon that Kitano is. Imagine replacing Sean Connery if he'd been in every Bond film, and you have some idea of what faces Kitano in taking on the mantle of the late Shintaro Katsu, the actor who played Zatoichi, the blind swordsman, from 1962 to 1989. To succeed, Kitano must make audiences forget Katsu?and Beat Takeshi. "Zatoichi and Katsu are mentioned in the same breath," says Kitano. "So if another actor tried to do it, then there is a lot of incompatibility. And that worried...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Striking A New Beat | 9/8/2003 | See Source »

...Arafat followed up quickly by naming Qureia to succeed Abbas, tossing a hot potato into President Bush's lap. Qureia, the popular speaker of the Palestinian legislature and key Oslo negotiator, is widely known as a moderate opposed to the armed intifada, who maintains close ties with many European, Arab and even some Israeli leaders (including Sharon's former foreign minister, Shimon Peres). He's not exactly a toady of Yasser Arafat, having clashed publicly with him on previous occasions - in many ways, Qureia's political pedigree is not dissimilar from that of Abbas, except that his personal relationship with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arafat Trumps Bush in Mideast Power Game | 9/8/2003 | See Source »

...case relies largely upon striking similarities in traditional African and Indonesian music. The Madagascar-Ghana portion of the trip is thus at once the most daring and speculative of the expedition. Beale explains: "Academics pose questions such as, 'Could the ancient Indonesians have done this or that?' If we succeed, it won't prove they did it, but then no one can say they couldn't do it. It seems to me an interesting thing to do for itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sailing in History's Wake | 9/1/2003 | See Source »

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