Word: reaping
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...that haven't been done before. "The show is always a work in progress," notes Michael Warren, executive producer of Family Matters. "It's a real challenge to keep the writers and actors excited." Warren and others like him also face the frustration of toiling away for series that reap little glory. "We opened up Must-See TV on Tuesday nights," laments Wings' executive producer Mark Reisman. "At the end of this season we will have 175 episodes--that's a lot. But this show didn't create a lot of buzz in the beginning, and that just stuck. This...
...higher than the current 65. Benefits could be means-tested so richer recipients would have more of their monthly stipend taxed. The system could be partly privatized, with more people responsible for their own retirement savings. Some of the system's money could be invested in stocks, which could reap a greater return than currently possible, as the trust fund invests only in Treasury securities...
...focused on the conduits, pouring tens of millions into advanced smart-highway systems, Japan has kept its eyes on nearer-term prizes, making its cars intelligent by adding one on-board feature at a time. It's an approach that could add value to the cars--and reap healthy profits for their makers--for decades to come, whether or not the smart highway arrives on schedule...
...costs or to dramatically increasing the quality of student life and education. Sixty million dollars could be used to hire more teaching fellows and train them better, to thoroughly renovate the MAC or to hire new professors. Harvard's really in the money now. Let's hope that students reap the rewards of HMC's Wall Street magic...
...next day Pollard and Johnson met at a hotel adjacent to Olympic Stadium and talked privately for 15 minutes. Johnson, who is about to reap endorsement bounty, graciously accepted an old warmup jacket from Pollard. Some things are priceless...