Word: card
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...just finished my paper the other night for History of Modern Architecture and bought my ethernet card which I was too lazy to buy before. Going to college is very difficult. I am living in a dorm. People had a funny reaction at first, but then they realize I pick my toenails like everybody else and they don’t care anymore. They are really respectful and nice. Some will say “Hey I really like your work.” Others come up and say nice things and go away, or just give a nice smile...
...worst things in the world is an online casino,” he claims. “You never know if they’re legit. Last fall semester I was playing online at least five days a week. The debt I owed was to the credit card company. Also, you can’t see the people. You never know who’s colluding. I stopped...
...There were the most amazingly eclectic, interesting people put together,” he states. “I play very high-stakes games. There are two types of people who gravitate towards those games: they’re either extremely wealthy or extremely good card players.” The players ranged from drug-dealers to Ivy Leaguers—they came from all different backgrounds. “I was friends with a guy who was in jail for stabbing a man to death,” he says. “These are people who you wouldn?...
...hourly rather than daily rates that make short-term rentals practical. An annual membership fee of $75 gives clients the flexibility to drive away with a set of wheels from any one of the over 50 parking spots in the Boston area with a simple swipe of their Zipcar-card. Robin Chase, CEO of Zipcar and a native of the Boston area, saw the city and its popular public transportation system as the perfect target for this type of enterprise. She points to the “hassle factor” of car ownership saying that, “owning...
...took a road trip with my brother and my uncle out to Colorado, and every night we’d stop and play cards for five to six hours a night. They’re the ones who taught me. It wasn’t too competitive. It was more like 50 cents and dollars. And then the stakes started increasing a little bit. I was probably up to win or lose $50 a night by the time I was 17. By the time I was 18, win or lose $400-$500 a night. As for the evolution...