Word: beared
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...first, it was wonderful. We met Rae's foster mother, who swooped in and rushed for Rae as if she were her long-lost daughter, which she almost was. She bear-hugged her. She stroked her hair. She touched every little nick and scar on her tan arms and legs. "What's this from?" she asked in Korean. She had fostered 31 babies, but it was as if she'd known only Rae. Rae was half grossed out, half purring. Somebody had just rushed in with the missing four months of her life. The foster mother wept. We wept...
...star Internet analyst Henry Blodget. Bullish through a five-month bloodletting, he decided last week to downgrade his opinion on 11 onetime highflyers, including Doubleclick, eBay and eToys. In the case of eToys, the stock had dropped 95%. Losing any more, I suppose, would be just too much to bear. So Blodget stepped up with his gutsy downgrade while investors everywhere, in spirit, collectively asked, Who needs analysts anyway...
...magazine that sex with ex-boyfriend Grant was "less than adequate," and that "we haven't had sex since we split up. I don't miss it." Juicy as the quotes are, Hurley insists the words never passed her lips. "The quotes regarding mine and Hugh's sex life bear no resemblance to anything I've ever said," Hurley said in a fax from her London office. Offering further proof, Hurley noted it would have been impossible for her to complain about Hugh's watching sports in bed because "we don't even have a TV in our bedroom." Thankfully...
...this cannot last. Where technicians quibble is the exact future points of resistance on the upside and support on the downside. Is the pennant symmetrical, ascending or descending? Let them quibble. Suffice to note that as the range narrows, we get closer to declaring a winner in the bull-bear tug-of-war. A textbook reading, says Richard McCabe, chief market analyst at Merrill Lynch, is that by late August, the pattern will be broken, the Dow's new direction evident...
...cycle of rising interest rates seems about over. The second half of presidential election years tends to be a good time for stocks. And technically speaking, the S&P 500 looks healthier than the Dow. So don't read too much into this chart chatter. But be you bear or bull, get your ducks in order now. We're close to finding out who's boss...