A lot of Americans get married. In fact, 70 percent of men and women 25 to 44 are married -- or have been.
Life after the military can be tough for many war veterans who struggle to adjust to life after combat.
Two good Samaritans returned more than $275,000 that tumbled out of an improperly secured armored truck in Syracuse, New York, last week. But some not-so-good Samaritans seem to have walked away with another $60,000 that fell onto the street.
SI.com caught up with Seth Davis, who's serving as a CBS studio analyst during the tournament, to get his impressions of Sunday's first-round action.
Some of the top undecided prospects from the class of 2009 are getting closer to a decision. But the nation's No. 1 prospect, running back Bryce Brown from East (Wichita, Kan.), could be wearing out his welcome.
The Columbus Blue Jackets have placed captain and leading scorer Rick Nash on injured reserve retroactive to Jan. 6.
The supermarket chain Frank DeCicco Sr. founded with his two brothers more than 30 years ago is still run by DeCiccos from top to bottom.
The day the IRS notified him that his business had been selected for a random audit, John Brimelow, owner of Atlanta PR and video-production company Atamira Communications, recalls thinking that "it's like you've won a very scary lottery."
Bitter cold gripped most of the United States on Monday, with temperatures dipping below normal from coast to coast.
Two summers ago, the Atlantic-10 formed a committee to come up with a new policy on scheduling. The policy, which went into effect this season, gives commissioner Linda Bruno the same authority many other commissioners have to veto games she deems harmful to her league. "We had several coaches on the committee, so the implementation of this has actually been quite painless," Bruno says. "So far, it's been working very well."
A lot of Americans get married. In fact, 70 percent of men and women 25 to 44 are married -- or have been.
Life after the military can be tough for many war veterans who struggle to adjust to life after combat.
Two good Samaritans returned more than $275,000 that tumbled out of an improperly secured armored truck in Syracuse, New York, last week. But some not-so-good Samaritans seem to have walked away with another $60,000 that fell onto the street.
SI.com caught up with Seth Davis, who's serving as a CBS studio analyst during the tournament, to get his impressions of Sunday's first-round action.
Some of the top undecided prospects from the class of 2009 are getting closer to a decision. But the nation's No. 1 prospect, running back Bryce Brown from East (Wichita, Kan.), could be wearing out his welcome.
The Columbus Blue Jackets have placed captain and leading scorer Rick Nash on injured reserve retroactive to Jan. 6.
The supermarket chain Frank DeCicco Sr. founded with his two brothers more than 30 years ago is still run by DeCiccos from top to bottom.
The day the IRS notified him that his business had been selected for a random audit, John Brimelow, owner of Atlanta PR and video-production company Atamira Communications, recalls thinking that "it's like you've won a very scary lottery."
Bitter cold gripped most of the United States on Monday, with temperatures dipping below normal from coast to coast.
Two summers ago, the Atlantic-10 formed a committee to come up with a new policy on scheduling. The policy, which went into effect this season, gives commissioner Linda Bruno the same authority many other commissioners have to veto games she deems harmful to her league. "We had several coaches on the committee, so the implementation of this has actually been quite painless," Bruno says. "So far, it's been working very well."
Dear FSB: My business partner and I each own 50 percent stock in a thriving technology business we formed five years ago. Recently, my business partner announced that he wants to start taking large amounts of the profits. I see this as a roadblock to continued growth and wish to keep my share of the profits in the company. Advice?
Coaching changes are common in college football, and this year looks to be no different.
"When I first got shot I only felt the bullet in my wrist,'' says Andray Blatche, the Washington Wizards' 6-11 forward. "So I thought I was fine. So immediately what I did was, I took the shirt off and wrapped it around my wrist to stop the blood and tighten it up tight. I was real cool the whole time because it didn't really hurt much, because I thought it was just my wrist. But once I got to meet the ambulance at McDonald's, the cop got there first and he seen I got my shirt off and he seen blood come from my chest. And he was like, 'Did you get shot in your chest?' And I said, 'No, just my wrist.' And he said, 'No, you got shot in your chest.'
Everyone knows about Duke-North Carolina and Louisville-Kentucky. But a new crop of rivalries has emerged in college hoops, fueled by poaching coaches, blue-chip recruits, buzzer-beaters and simple bad blood.
Midnight Madness Day is upon us, and it's time to choose what combination we value most in a preseason No. 1 team in the Power Rankings. We're presented with five options:
Despite the addition of Miami, Virginia Tech and Boston College, the ACC has regressed in recent seasons rather than become one of the elite football conferences. But last week, the conference took a nice step forward on two fronts thanks to Florida State and Maryland. Midnight madness can be put on hold in the hoops-crazy conference, at least temporarily.
Every week I receive e-mails from readers asking how I could have left off so-and-so, the quarterback/running back/receiver from their beloved State U. And every week there's one player who garners landslide write-in support.
The chant came thundering down Strawberry Canyon on a picturesque Saturday night in Berkeley. The Golden Bears were on their way to avenging an embarrassing loss to Tennessee in convincing fashion, and the backdrop to the cross-country matchup had a voice: "Pac-Ten Foot-Ball," cried the masses inside Memorial Stadium. "Pac-Ten Foot-Ball."
Question: I've read that if I withdraw roughly 4 percent of my retirement savings each year to live on, my money will last virtually forever. But does this 4 percent include the money my portfolio already kicks off in dividends and interest? Or is the 4 percent withdrawal on top of that? - Doug Martin, Syracuse, New York
One of the fun things about writing the Mailbag each week is you never know which portion will touch the biggest nerve. Last week, it was a seemingly innocuous, buried-on-page-three question from a reader named Jeff in Atlanta wondering why Georgia coach Mark Richt isn't catching any heat for failing to reach the national title game.
Name: Suzanne Grassel School: Syracuse Age: 21 Major: Magazine journalism and sport management Job: Media Intern, USA Boxing, USOC Paid/unpaid: Paid School Credit: Yes Hours: 8-5, Monday-Friday Duration: May 30-Aug. 27 (with a week off in the middle)
Some guys will do anything to get a glimpse of Beckham. -- Steve, Scarborough, Me.
The Declaration of Independence states "that all men are created equal." That phrase may be the defining idea that best describes democracy.
1. The New York Daily News is reporting that youthful Giants quarterback Eli Manning got engaged Tuesday night. Eli needed to move fast while there were still women available who hadn't been impregnated by Tom Brady.
1. No room at the inn: Maybe there's one reason that's been overlooked to explain the dearth of big first-round upsets in this year's tournament -- a lousy breakfast buffet. According to the Washington Post, the NCAA assigns teams to hotels based on their seedings. The top-seeded teams get the best digs, typically downtown Marriotts, while lower-seeded squads might end up at an airport Holiday Inn or a rundown "historic" hotel. I wish I'd known that, say, Butler was finally loving life in a luxury hotel as a No. 5 seed rather than its usual No. 11 or 12 before I picked them to lose against Maryland. Maybe the scouting reports should include the thread count of the sheets at the team's hotel.
NEW YORK -- Eric Devendorf admits he's been a little nervous lately about his team's NCAA tournament status.
It's a Mata-Matta world -- in that order -- at the top of the regular season's final Power Rankings.
It's February, which means the 'Bag has reached the point where we've been on the road long enough that we have no idea where we are in the morning when the alarm clock goes off. Yet, there are indeed benefits to so much travel, not least picking up those little nuggets that you can only learn on the road. To wit:
Hatred, hatred Is the only thing that lasts forever. Hatred, hatred Is the only thing that keeps us together. -- Raymond Douglas Davies
You have to win your way into the NCAA tournament, not back in. Thus, if you end up being a bubble team Selection weekend, it's important to have what I call a "hang-your-hat win."
I've been talking to Finch quite a bit lately. I thought you should know what he has to say.
Many Americans looking at the values of their homes are asking not whether it will fall, but how much. But in fact, more than half of the 100 top markets in the U.S. are slated to rise next year.
High gas prices and general pocketbook angst will certainly be a factor when voters cast their ballots on Election Day, analysts predict.
For years Frank Valone never had a problem cashing in frequent-flier miles when he traveled between Syracuse and his home in San Francisco, even at peak times. Then, out of the blue sky, airlines d...
Growing up in Yonkers, New York, a blue-collar suburb that borders the Bronx, Robert V.P. Hutter dreamed from the time he was 10 than he would become a great psychiatrist. He didn't.
Your mom isn't the only person who clips supermarket coupons. According to a recent survey by Visa, 72% of Americans who earn more than $125,000 use them, compared with 65% of the population at lar...
Q. So far, home buyers have been right in thinking home prices will keep going up.
NEW YORK (MONEY Magazine) - Robert Shiller argues that housing in many cities is undergoing the same irrational exuberance as stocks did in their bubble days. MONEY's Amy Feldman spoke with him in late December about what homeowners and potential buyers can do to keep from getting burned.
NEW YORK (MONEY Magazine) - Robert Shiller argues that housing in many cities is undergoing the same irrational exuberance as stocks did in their bubble days. MONEY's Amy Feldman spoke with him in late December about what homeowners and potential buyers can do to keep from getting burned.
A majority of Americans have more than half their wealth locked up in their homes; a third have 80% or more. It's a big risk to have so much wealth tied up in a single, illiquid investment, and the...
A majority of Americans have more than half their wealth locked up in their homes; a third have 80 percent or more. It's a big risk to have so much wealth tied up in a single, illiquid investment, and there's essentially nothing we can do to hedge that risk.
When Peter Lesko bought a three-bedroom ranch-style home on the north side of Syracuse, N.Y., in 1999, he had all the usual policies to protect his investment. He was covered by title insurance, fi...
The most interesting products, by and large, aren't the ones that draw attention to themselves. After all, anyone can invent something with lots of bells and whistles. No, the most interesting prod...
Preparing to meet JetBlue Airways CEO David Neeleman--by all accounts the most successful, innovative airline founder to hit the scene since Herb Kelleher--I'm thinking I'll encounter a certain swa...
Turn, turn, turn. In this season's nostalgia hunt, Gen Xers and their youth-obsessed parents are raiding attics, flea markets, and eBay in search of their favorite moldy oldies. "Albums are your ow...
The recently enacted National Energy Policy Act opens up power generation to a new class of independent companies that will burn any fuel they choose and compete on the prices they charge utilities...
In which Kindly Dr. Keeping Up, still gamely trying to figure out the point of the endangered-species laws, plunges boldly into Cicero Swamp in upstate New York for a closeup look at midsummer madn...
A giant step for Men's Lib: At Chicago's O'Hare and Los Angeles's airports, United Air Lines has installed changing tables in the men's rooms for fathers traveling with babies. ''It's very convenie...
A FEW THINGS we all used to know about pay: Wage earners got paid strictly by the hour. Salary earners got paid by the year. And executives -- only executives -- got bonuses. It was a simple system...
IN THE MID-1970s, when Sam Newhouse, the sire of the media fortune, was still alive and hale, his family gathered in Connecticut to celebrate the 20th wedding anniversary of his younger brother, Te...
Another place to have your money in this summer's tepid market may be option funds. These funds, which hedge against price fluctuations by trading options, tend to excel in flat markets. In recent ...
THE SPECTER of takeovers is haunting a lot of Americans -- and not just because junk bonds might prove junk indeed or because spooked managers might cling harder to short-term concerns. Many also f...

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