Word: businessã
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...claiming that the extra day will prove a huge boon for business??Sunday isn’t quite synonymous with heavy drinking. Rather, a fully-functioning, six-day-a-week store will not likely lose significant business because people are forced to venture a few blocks to purchase their toxins elsewhere whenever afflicted with the urge for a Sunday drink. It’s doubtful that Louie’s—which will remain closed on Sundays—will lose much business to beer-guzzling students on other, more alcohol-laden nights...
...problem is rooted in how the majority of DMCA disputes are handled in practice. A copyright holder—sometimes an artist, more often a business??sends an accusation, in the form of a “cease and desist” letter, to the Internet Service Provider (ISP) through whom the accused is getting her access to the Internet. Because the ISP doesn’t want to get sued for copyright infringement, it takes down, or blocks access to, the allegedly infringing material. In return, the ISP can get a grant of immunity. Under the DMCA...
Edward Miliband, a Harvard visiting professor of government on leave from his post as a special advisor to Brown, said the scholarship has more to do with “embracing the concept of promoting business?? than it does asserting the superiority of U.S. business schools...
...Should one hold doors open for Yalies? FM enlists the help of Jodi R. R. Smith (Ms. Mannersmith), founder and president of Mannersmith Etiquette Consulting in Newton, Mass., to ensure that Harvard also wins the battle of manners. Ms. Mannersmith has been the guest of honor at Women in Business??s etiquette dinner for the past three years and has worked with the Quad Houses to spread her gospel of courtesy down Garden Street. According to Ms. Mannersmith, the best way to strut your stuff etiquette-wise is to err on the side of the proper and polite...
...money, but if she aborts, the clinic earns hundreds or thousands of dollars. Joy Davis, a former abortion provider in Alabama, said of her experience, “A very short time after working there, I realized one thing: we were not there to help women. We were a business??a money-making organization.” Carol Everett, who worked at abortion clinics in Texas, described the situation in the early 1980s: “I was compensated at the rate of $25 per case plus one-third of the clinics, so you can imagine what...