Word: enterings
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...ago—that competition for the American leisure hour is at an all-time high. For while our televisions and movie screens sit silent, our video games and radio stations and Internet chat rooms will not. And if the movie and television industry would like to successfully re-enter the playing field after the strike is over, they’re going to have to exercise more quality control over content than we’ve seen in the last few years. (Read: “The Mummy Returns.” No wonder ticket sales are down...
...that, IPCC scientists fed a wide range of scenarios involving varying estimates of population and economic growth, changes in technology and other factors into computers. That process gave them about 35 estimates, ranging from 6 billion to 35 billion tons, of how much excess carbon dioxide will enter the atmosphere...
Next time you find yourself duped by the forces of evil, rest assured that deliverance is nigh. If you simply believe in brotherhood and love, you will enter into a priestly order of divine beings by passing through a series of odd Masonic rituals that enable you to confound the conspirators aligned against you. And, if you play your cards right, you might even manage to fall passionately in love and pick up a nifty flute with animal-charming powers along...
...starting point for any count is 50-50, with Georgia Democrat Zell Miller on board the Bush plan and Rhode Island Republican Lincoln Chafee siding with the Democrats. Enter the back-scratching: Vermont Republican Jim Jeffords says he could bolt if Republicans don't give him a $180 billion plan to fully fund the federal share of education programs; Nebraska Democrat Ben Nelson - as a narrowly elected red-state Democrat, a prime target for Bush blackmail - is talking to GOP leaders about farm programs. And Chafee may yet yield to the hard party sell: "The President feels strongly about...
...Enter the economy. Two weeks ago, Democrats seized on the fact that Bush's back-loaded tax plan - which dates back to a primary fight with Steve Forbes and was designed at the time not to over-stimulate a booming economy - does not quite jibe with his gloomy talk about the current economic lethargy. They introduced a $60 billion instant tax cut meant to let the air out of Bush's tires by removing the urgency from the debate over the $1.6 trillion version. But last week Bush caught up, throwing his support behind a retroactive cut - on the condition...