Word: bigger
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...generally on the economy. "When people's house value increases," says Belsky, "they feel freer to spend from the wealth they have. You may decide to buy a bigger car, to eat out more at restaurants." And, he adds, people spend those hypothetical riches faster when their houses go up in value than when their stocks do because they believe housing gains are more stable. But that's all well and good, because housing gains are more stable, right? Ahem, right...
...real estate holdings. Phyllis Rockower, who started the Real Estate Investor's Club of Los Angeles in 1996, is worried too. Membership in her club has soared. "Most people who come to my meetings sold their high-tech stocks after 2000," she says. "We had to move to a bigger room. It's either a sign of the times or a market top." What's her bet? Rockower has six houses on the market--nearly every investment property she owns...
...fans like to describe our passion in religious terms, as if the places our heroes play are secular cathedrals. It's easy to see why. When you truly, deeply love a sports team, you give yourself up to something bigger than yourself, not just because your individuality is rendered insignificant in the mass of the crowd, but because being a fan involves faith. No matter what its current form may be, your team is worthy of blind devotion?or will soon redeem itself. Belief is all. As Brooklyn Dodgers fans said in the 1950s: Wait 'til next year...
...been claimed to be found, itself an event of seismic proportions. Conventional anthropological wisdom holds that animals, in the absence of big predators, shrink to adapt to life on small, closed habitats like Flores, a phenomenon known as island dwarfism. Humans, however, are thought to have evolved linearly, developing bigger bodies and brains. H. floresiensis, relatively modern yet small?but not a Pygmy, according to its supporters?explodes that theory. "[It'd] go completely against the flow of human evolution," says Thorne. "This would undo everything that we are." Even if the island-dwarfing process did indeed shrink H. floresiensis...
...world's oldest art fair, Venice is but one of a number of biennales the Australia Council targets to position its artists internationally: "it's part of a much bigger strategy and matrix of events and approaches," says Brown. But for New Zealand's Burke, it is the be-all and end-all; a one-stop shop for contemporary art. So when et al.'s "the fundamental practice" opens next Thursday, it will be the climax of a near-military campaign since the artists were chosen in July last year...