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Word: fee (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...should have known better. But back in May of 2004 I threw caution to the wind and voted in favor of increasing the Student Activities Fee from $35 to $75. Like an excited schoolgirl, I giggled at the prospect of rocking out to the hottest new boy-band in Lavietes Pavilion or embracing my gangsta side with Snoop Dogg on a hot and sweaty spring evening in the MAC quad. There seemed no way for the fresh-faced Undergraduate Council (UC) representatives hawking this new utopian vision to fall short. They convinced me with their slogan...

Author: By John Hastrup, | Title: Cut the Termbill—by Yourself | 11/15/2005 | See Source »

...them and getting them to movie theaters, calls for more creative solutions. Avica, which makes servers, wants to digitize all 500-odd screens in Ireland using private funding. In its bid to convert 500 screens across Europe by 2007, Belgian firm XDC will charge theater owners a small monthly fee and make up the difference itself. And at Disney, which recently installed 84 digital projectors in the U.S. to show a 3-D version of its big-buzz animation Chicken Little, senior vice president of technology Chris Carey says compromise is key: "Exhibitors, distributors and technology providers can all make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Reel Is Gone | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

...sale was small, but it showed that the new Governor was determined to find savings anywhere she could, from having all state agencies join together to bid for computers to asking state housekeeping workers to wear their own pants instead of government-issued ones. Through spending cuts, fee increases and some borrowing, Sebelius was able to balance Kansas' budget in her first year in office without raising taxes or cutting funding for education...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Kathleen Sebelius | Kansas | 11/13/2005 | See Source »

What is the TSA worried about these days? Long lines, which annoy travelers and make choice terrorist targets. To speed things up, the agency is taking its Registered Traveler program nationwide in June. Passengers who enroll--pay a fee and get a background check and biometric scans--will be fast-tracked through security. The program, along with fewer prohibited carry-on items, should help the TSA's 45,000 screeners spend less time confiscating cuticle clippers. The hope is that by creating a voluntary database that identifies frequent flyers, the measures will also reduce reliance on racial profiling. Sounds smart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Putting a Finer Point On Airport Security | 11/7/2005 | See Source »

...separations between parents and children, such as the one in place in Paraguay, would reduce these problems. While Bartholet also agreed that poverty is a driving factor behind women’s choices to put their children up for adoption, she said she did not believe that the adoption fee motivates women to give up their children. “Money given to biological parents by adoptive parents rarely makes the difference in the choice whether or not to give up their child,” Bartholet said. Ortiz said that a dearth of social services in poor countries...

Author: By Ramya Parthasarathy, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Harvard Hosts Debate on Transnational Adoption | 11/2/2005 | See Source »

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