Word: reaches
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...Mountain Creek Resort in Vernon, N.J. Since she had already earned a trip to Torino, Teter could just, as she says, "chill out." She shimmied to the hip-hop music blaring over the loudspeakers, and cheered while her teammates soared. "It's great to have the opportunity to reach out to people that don't know much about snowboarding, so they can see it, and get stoked on it," says Teter, 19, of the exposure the upcoming Olympics will give her sport. ?We're so stoked on it, and we're just amped if other people are stoked...
...later frozen out because aides became suspicious of his funding sources and annoyed that the issues he raised did not mesh with their agenda. A top Republican official said it was clear to him that Abramoff couldn't pick up the phone and reach Bush aides because Abramoff had asked the official to serve as an intermediary...
...acquire a stake when regulations allow. "We always try to be the first through the door," says Yorke, HSBC's China chief. In India HSBC employs mobile marketing teams that push its services at stalls set up in shopping malls, office buildings and residential complexes in order to reach people beyond the bank's limited branch network. In Malaysia, where the majority of the population is Muslim, HSBC offers Islamic banking--conducted without interest charges, which are banned under Islamic law--along with its regular services...
...expanded its screens each week, to 683 last week--still fewer than one-third of the number for Glory Road. Yet Brokeback outgrossed that movie and all others for three nights after the Golden Globes. Late last week, it had amassed $34 million--a take that could easily reach $100 million between the announcement of the Academy Award nominations (Jan. 31) and Oscar night (Mar. 5). It has now expanded to 1,190 screens, but theater owners are impatient. "They want us on 2,000 screens right away," says Schamus, sounding like the chef of a family restaurant that just...
...basic case is this: 529s let you invest money without having Uncle Sam reach in each year and tax your earnings. Thanks to the magic of compounding, a yearly investment of $3,000 that grows, say, 7% annually, to $38,632 after 10 years, could grow tax free to $44,351, according to Robert Matricardi at T. Rowe Price. (You also don't get taxed when you spend the money, though that little bonus will run out at the end of 2010 unless Congress extends...