Word: cheapness
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...unlike Newcastle Brown, and an excellent opportunity to gloat to your friends at state school until they begin to hate you. We only hope the Pub’s popularity persists. Much of its work is already done: it’s gorgeous, has cable, and offers up cheap brews in a convenient location. However, it is important that the College continues to schedule diverse and entertaining events in the space to draw undergraduates and to make it the bustling social center it can—and should—be. Much of the recognition for the Pub?...
After much fanfare and two years of planning, Harvard’s first permanent pub for undergraduates opened its doors Friday evening, welcoming approximately 1,300 undergraduate revelers to cheap beer and live music. According to Zachary A. Corker ’04, Loker Commons project manager and one of the brains behind the Cambridge Queen’s Head Pub, the night was a resounding success, and the pub’s patrons included a “good mix” of undergraduates and recent graduates. The day after the pub’s grand opening festivities, Corker...
...Avril! Why’d you have to go and make things so complicated? Everyone can see the way you’re acting like you’re somebody else gets me frustrated.” Okay, maybe that’s a cheap and predictable joke, but it’s about on par with what Lavigne is doing these days...
This kind of hand-holding does not come cheap. In the middle of a crisis, companies pay consultants anywhere from $50,000 and up, depending on how long and how many people are deployed. A precrisis preparation session costs at least $25,000. Still, says Dezenhall, who has represented such companies as Procter & Gamble, ExxonMobil, Eli Lilly and GE, "the amount of money spent on crisis management is a drop in the bucket compared to what you might lose." Corporations routinely analyze how political risk or interest-rate risk might affect their bottom line. Argenti says the "reputational risk...
...Sadly, Kaye's indictment is well founded. But he's also right in his choice of words. People like Cho are indeed only seemingly powerful. In an open culture with cheap and plentiful guns, any fool can kill a lot of people. For all the loss and suffering such a shooting sparks, it is in fact a weak and furtive act, one that masquerades as a gesture of sublime power but is really an act of confusion and cowardice. The very purpose of the murders, Welner explains, is to give the shooter the last word. Unfortunately, what he says when...