Word: nested
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Bart Simpson, brings her one-woman show, My Life as a 10 Year Old Boy, to the Fringe. And Guy Masterton, who directed last year's hit Twelve Angry Men with a cast of comics, is back this year casting comics in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest...
...take in now. Yet if you also have to pay retiree medical costs and are depending on only your 401(k) and Social Security, you will be left with about 57% of your preretirement income, according to a study by the benefits firm Hewitt Associates. To boost your nest egg, don't retire until 67, the age at which many workers are eligible for full Social Security benefits, and contribute an additional 2% of savings to your 401(k) plan...
...slow, continual slide," she shrugs. Moser lives frugally, in a house she bought with her sisters seven years ago. Single, she tries not to spend more than €400 per month on food, household and personal expenses, including clothes, so she can pay off the mortgage and have a nest egg saved up when she retires. She enjoys traveling and takes sculpture classes, but only once in her life has she bought something on credit - a secondhand car. "I'm my own Finance Minister," she jokes. "I don't run up debt." Still, if the state didn't take such...
...series, which recently has concentrated on 50s and 60s musicals that are a familiar part of the Broadway repertory, must think about expanding its horizons. Of course I mean backward. Last year's revival of Sigmund Romberg's "New Moon" showed that operetta can comfortably nest in the Encores! bosom. How about a true faux operetta: "Hollywood Pinafore," George S. Kaufman's tweaking of "H.M.S. Pinafore" into a satire on the movie business? (It ran briefly on Broadway in 1946 and was not heard again until it surfaced six years ago in Discover the Lost Musicals.) Those Kern musicals that...
...that the Pakistani army has stirred the hornet's nest, it is unlikely militants can be caught unawares and captured in their tribal-area hideaways in the foreseeable future. Bin Laden's fighters, says Islamabad-based columnist and retired General Talat Masood, "have almost certainly melted away into the hills." Mohammed, meanwhile, is now a local hero. Mobs of cheering tribesmen gather when his six-vehicle convoy, each auto mounted with machine guns, roars past. "I believe in the concept of jihad," Mohammed told reporters in his village of Shakai after the truce was signed, adding that he still considers...