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...marble Tehran palace, Rafsanjani, 70, strides in with the bounce of a man half his age. He's even accompanied by his film crew. It's all part of a slick campaign aimed at selling one of the Islamic republic's old founding fathers as a hip reformer in tune with restless young Iranians, in hopes of returning the former President to the job he left in 1997. As he settles into a gilt-trimmed chair, he says he may do a campaign commercial with the Iranian director of the recent film The Lizard, a huge hit that poked rare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Comeback Cleric | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

...their new CD last week, you could almost sense the relief at record label EMI. Chairman Eric Nicoli partly blamed a 13% dip in annual profits on the delay of the group's latest album. All the more irritating, then, that Crazy Frog's Axel F, mixing the theme tune from the Beverly Hills Cop movie with an infuriating mobile-phone ring tone - think two-stroke scooters voiced by an animated frog - outsold Coldplay's single fourfold last week, according to music retailer HMV. Exploiting the Crazy Frog's appeal (the ring tone is sold across Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bizwatch | 5/29/2005 | See Source »

...We’re getting our running game back a little bit,” said Harvard coach Joe Walsh of the tune-ups. “We’re getting aggressive...

Author: By Alex Mcphillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Baseball Takes Twin Victories from Quinnipiac | 5/27/2005 | See Source »

Scientists, for their part, were singing a different tune. "It's a tremendous advance," says Paul Berg, a Nobel laureate from Stanford University and a major backer of California's independent stem-cell initiative. "The Koreans' work is incredibly impressive," says Stephen Minger, director of the stem-cell biology laboratory at King's College, London. "It is fantastic--a major, major breakthrough...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside the Korean Cloning Lab | 5/23/2005 | See Source »

...China, Japan and Singapore as well--is rapidly outdistancing the work being done in the U.S., reflecting, in large part, real differences in government policy. South Korea, for example, recently banned the use of cloning techniques for the creation of babies but fully supports Hwang's work--to the tune of $2 million a year. By contrast, researchers in the U.S. who want to study human embryonic stem cells are restricted to a handful of federally approved stem-cell lines--most of which, they say, are of such poor quality they cannot be used. Or scientists can forgo federal funding...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Inside the Korean Cloning Lab | 5/23/2005 | See Source »

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