Word: haulings
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Team Yao has deals in China with cell-phone and gaming companies, and there is speculation about a global beverage deal. But the biggest haul could come at the end of the season, when Yao's sneaker contract expires. Nike must either negotiate a new deal or see a rival buy the entree that Yao can provide to an estimated 200 million hoops-playing, merchandise-buying Chinese...
...that no aggression can be justified unless the inspectors find evidence of Baghdad defaulting on its promised disarmament. Until now, however, the inspectors have found little more than some documents that still have to be deciphered and a dozen empty chemical warheads that the Iraqis say they overlooked - a haul unlikely to be viewed as sufficient to make a definitive case. "We are the eyes and ears of the Security Council," Blix protested last week in Baghdad after meeting with Iraqi officials. "How the Security Council will react, what will be the political evaluation, that is up to them...
...step down in order to be fair both to this special community and to our other responsibilities,” he wrote in an e-mail. “If I want to be able to teach at least a little as well, I cannot for the long haul be doing both a faculty dean’s job and a master’s job and serving in two faculties at the same time...
...spends more time talking with George W. Bush about the war on terrorism than National Security Adviser CONDOLEEZZA RICE. That's because Bush likes to hear all sides--and then looks to Rice to haul the differing opinions together into a unified policy. Iraq has tested her. Arguments over everything from what constituted evidence of Saddam's trickery to whether to ask for a new U.N. resolution sanctioning Iraq have been pushed, pulled and squeezed by every faction. Though Rice, 48, keeps her opinions closely guarded, she has muffled some of the war whoops coming from more hawkish members...
...Native American population--Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota--account for less than 3% of all casino proceeds. On average, they produce the equivalent of about $400 in revenue per Indian. Meanwhile, casinos in California, Connecticut and Florida--states with only 3% of the Indian population--haul in 44% of all revenue, an average of $100,000 per Indian. In California, the casino run by the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians pulls in well over $100 million a year. That's about $900,000 per member...