Word: fee
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...income patients a way to pay for the rising cost of health care? Could they trade their skills for medical treatment? After all, barter may have fallen on hard times, but it's an American tradition: for decades people exchanged services for goods, not dollars. A country doctor's fee might be a bushel of potatoes or a freshly baked...
...Jack Marshall, who in January 1994 registered the Internet address for his startup, AltaVista Technology. He might as well have stayed in bed after that -- it's unlikely anything he did with his company subsequently ever yielded the kind of return he was to get on his $100 registration fee...
...without a consultancy fee! This is a poor village, you can't just write about us, make money off us and give us nothing...
Good question. A TIME/CNN poll of 1,024 Americans conducted last week suggests that the country is of two minds about health reform. Although 85% responded that they were "very satisfied" or at least "fairly satisfied" with the quality of medical care they receive, 68% said they think traditional fee-for-service plans provide better health care than HMOs, and only 41% of those covered by managed care said they were "very confident" that their plan would pay for their treatment if they got really sick...
...organization's bleak finances, and P.K. soon announced it was shredding a projected $117 million budget. At the end of March, it laid off its paid staff of 345. At the Washington rally, the head Promise Keeper, Bill McCartney, boldly announced that P.K. would drop the $60 attendance fee, which provided nearly three-quarters of its income, in hopes of bolstering attendance...