Word: soarings
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...Death is a "sweet bluebonnet spring" ("When we die we say we'll catch some blackbird's wings/ And we will fly away to heaven") in the gorgeous remake of her Gulf Coast Highway, a duet with Hootie's Darius Rucker. His gruff baritone and Griffith's twangy soprano soar apart, then join in double rapture. The instrumentation--string quintet, Floyd Cramerish rolling piano, electric slide guitar--makes the song a pretty little anthology of pop's fine old tendency to synthesize, not isolate, strains of music. Listening in the Great Beyond to Griffith's salving ballads, God might...
...down huge salaries, out of proportion to company results. The solution? Link pay to stock performance. It seems to have worked like a charm. Corporate profits are at a record high, a task that is, after all, the CEO's job. Those lush profits have helped the stock market soar, as anyone with a mutual fund plainly knows. And it is that bull market that has turned millions upon millions of stock options into pure CEO gold, in cartloads unforeseen by anyone...
...heat on. The risk of heart attack--a major cause of postoperative death--can be cut in half by warming a patient to normal temperatures during SURGERY. Body temperature tends to plummet during an operation, which can cause arteries to constrict and blood pressure to soar. The cost of warming up? Just $15 for a special no-chill blanket...
...fight? A deal makes sound business sense, notes TIME Wall Street Columnist Daniel Kadlec: "The tobacco industry knows it could pay for this entire settlement by just increasing prices. It wouldn't affect their current operations at all. It would finally give them immunity to lawsuits, and stocks will soar." In fact, the news received a warm reception on Wall Street, with Philip Morris up 4 1/4 and RJ Reynolds up 3 1/4. Still, a number of of possibly insurmountable hurdles remain. For one thing, any deal that would shield cigarette companies from future litigation would require...
...private pensions replacing Social Security. Those who can afford to put their retirement savings in riskier investments will earn higher rates of returns. Plus, those people will be freed of the burden of helping out other Americans. But as some earn more, we will surely see elderly poverty rates soar. Not everyone has the means or the know-how to make the market work for them...