Word: companyã
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...stories of scores of students whose belongings were mismanaged by CollegeBoxes last summer attest to the company??s disregard for its own policies and for the customer’s needs. Knowing this, student leaders privately and publicly (including in an Undergraduate Council resolution and a Crimson editorial) called on Harvard to show better judgment than to be taken in by the racket again. Thanks to Harvard’s apparent gullibility to the salesmanship of CollegeBoxes, our only university-supported summer storage option is to gamble with our physical possessions...
...they blissfully, yet somewhat naively sent their prized possessions off to Box Limbo. Their “junk” was lost and for three months Collegeboxes remained indifferent to their plight. But like vengeful Norse gods, a few intrepid Kirkland residents led an all-out war against the company??which ultimately proved more successful than their thus-far embarrassing efforts at CEB Risk. Predictably, their efforts were followed by the passage of righteously indignant legislation by our august Undergraduate Council (UC) (of course belatedly and only once UC leaders were completely assured of the initiative?...
Krein offers the example of a company??s earnings falling short of expectations, after which the market will often “overreact...
...Operations Zachary M. Gingo ’98 wrote in an e-mailed statement yesterday.Gingo said administrators elected to use the company again—despite last year’s difficulties—because of major changes in Collegeboxes’ operations over the past year and the company??s ability to handle the College’s substantial storage needs.More than 500 Harvard students used Collegeboxes’ services last year, according to Scott Neuberger, the company??s president and chief financial officer.An e-mail sent to all undergraduates on Tuesday, signed by both...
...laugh. Last year’s show was “a child-friendly adaptation of ‘A Tale of Two Cities,” says Hoagland. “Instead of chopping off heads, we gave them hair cuts.” The company??s actors are drawn to the freedom that allows for such changes, say the directors. SGCT can serve as a respite from the gravity that often pervades the Harvard theatre community. Take, for instance, the reasoning behind choosing to adapt “Hansel and Gretel” for this year?...