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Word: bracketeers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Donnie McFadden, 30, a steakhouse chef, heavy-metal music fan and newly minted golf nut from Hobbs, N.M. His fashion sense is decidedly more WWF than PGA: tank top and shorts, shaved head, piercings and a sun tattoo across one forearm. "Golf shouldn't be about age or tax bracket," he barks. Laughs Michael Caruso, editor of Rupert Murdoch's new Gen-X magazine Maximum Golf (which claims a circulation of 300,000): "There's something to be said for anything that explodes the old form. Whether these things will ever catch on, I'm doubtful. When was the last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gonzo Golfers Play On Ski Slopes | 7/24/2000 | See Source »

...than they would if they were single--seems to make as much sense as a tax on baseball or apple pie. Here's how the penalty works: If a man and woman, each making $60,000, fall in love and marry, they will be pushed into a higher tax bracket. The $120,000 couple will pay a higher rate than the two singles would have. It seems unfair. But that doesn't mean anything is going to be done about it anytime soon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marriage-Penalty Tax | 7/24/2000 | See Source »

Consider someone in the 28% tax bracket before and after retirement, saving $10,000 a year the five years before retiring. The money earns 10% annually. She withdraws equal amounts over 25 years and exhausts the account. Here's what her last five years' worth of contributions would net on an after-tax basis: $157,400 from a 401(k) with an average match; $121,000 from a 401(k) with no match; $102,300 from a taxable stock fund, and just $93,087 from a low-cost variable annuity. The 401(k) with a match is a clear winner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stop That 401(k)! | 7/10/2000 | See Source »

...raised and spent less than $3 million - had a visibility problem. He was the devil New Jerseyans knew, and they told him where to go. In defeat, Florio called his vanquisher "a threat to democracy," but will still support Corzine against a Republican closer to Florio's own tax bracket, Bob Franks. Hardly the makings of a crusade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Wants to Vote for a Multimillionaire? | 6/7/2000 | See Source »

...approach graduation these are just a few of my most salient memories. Many will dismiss them as isolated incidents, unrepresentative of Harvard life. Of course, I could include other, more general observations: that most friendship circles fall within the same tax bracket, that most student government "progressives" have never spent an hour volunteering at a shelter, and that most of our fellow students would readily stab us in the back in order to climb the extracurricular ladder. It is true that my indictment does not impugn every individual here. But, I am deeply certain that my portrait does accurately represent...

Author: By Noah Oppenheim, | Title: Remembering Harvard | 5/22/2000 | See Source »

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