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...guys are prosecuted and there is at least some attempt to punish them. I appreciate all the good people who don't break the rules. Tom Wright Raleigh, North Carolina, U.S. Music You Can Use "The Power Of Mozart" described how listening to the composer's music can help "treat ailments ranging from acne to Alzheimer's disease and even, it is claimed, make you and your kids smarter" [Jan. 16]. It is ironic that while Mozart's compositions are used for the purpose of healing, it is alleged that Eminem's rapping and ranting are used...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Warrior's Legacy | 2/4/2006 | See Source »

...bushy-tailed, Mr. Canaday clearly enjoys the privilege of sleeping later, of spending less time in transit, of wearing more fashionable, less comfortable shoes—all because he lives in a more convenient location that he did nothing to deserve. For the sake of justice, Harvard needs to treat all students equally. Especially Mr. Canaday, the pompous bastard. It’s so unfair. I propose the construction of a futuristic, spherical, rotating dorm (whose name should include equal quantities of each letter of the alphabet, so all feel equally important) in which the rooms are equidistant from every...

Author: By James H. O'keefe, | Title: Sweltering in Justice | 2/3/2006 | See Source »

...visiting German minister in 1936. While talking to the ambassador of an ideology that would, in the near future, invade his country and butcher millions of his coreligionists he said: “I am a Marxist and a Jew, but we cannot achieve anything if we treat ideological barriers as insurmountable...

Author: By Mark A. Adomanis | Title: When the Process Doesn’t Work | 2/2/2006 | See Source »

...HSAs contain health-care costs? The thinking behind HSAs is that people will be prudent with the money because it's their own, not some insurance company's. Maybe, but that won't solve a big problem: at least 75% of U.S. health-care dollars go to treat those with chronic ailments. Getting the majority to spend their first few thousand dollars wisely won't help the ailing minority cut their astronomical costs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HSAS: A Healthy Idea? | 1/29/2006 | See Source »

...world, insulated as far as possible from the daily difficulties of life in Kabul. At a cost of some $1.2 million a year, the hotel will run its own electricity generators - essential in a city where power often flickers on for only four hours every other day - and will treat its own water and sewage. Step into the Serena's marble lobby and the almost medieval street life of Kabul - with its open drains and mud-brick hovels - seems impossibly remote. The only reminders that you're in Afghanistan are the armed Loh and Behold Avant-garde murals and imaginative...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: "Take Me To The Serena" | 1/28/2006 | See Source »

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