Word: fee
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...calls the consulting arrangement "a minuscule part of my business." A close financier friend says it's "light stuff for Michael. He should be able to dash off this kind of advice on the car phone while he's taking his son to the ball game." Perhaps, but a fee of, say, $30 million would in fact represent a very significant fraction of CAA's annual revenues...
...questioning the principle of absolute priority for college athletes. That's who the facilities were built for. But as long as the Athletic Department is charging a fee for participation cards, it's accepting the fact that recreational users are a constituency too. Perhaps it might find ways, through careful scheduling, to accommodate the college without so frequently banishing the rest of us. It might collect all the blackout times and dates on a single notice (something that's never been done). It might even leave copies of such a notice, regularly updated, where we could pick them up. Then...
...Texas gun law would work much like current laws which cover the use of motorized vehicles. Every citizen who wished to carry a gun would be required to pass a twelve-hour training course and then pay a fee to obtain a license. In the current Texas political climate, it appears that the bill will pass both the House and Senate. Governor Richards is expected to veto the bill; a legislative override is possible but not certain...
Lexis access is only available to Law School faculty and students. If I wanted to do research using Nexis, I would have to make an appointment with the Kennedy school and pay a fee to do a search. I also discovered that Nexis is available for a fee at Baker Library, but this is such an obscure bit of information that I doubt anyone knows about...
...Eisenhower the student council has been enlisted as a cash cow, generating $1,500 a month in profit from its "market day," which allows fee- paying customers to buy food in bulk through the school. Through an agreement with the local parks authority, new public tennis courts are located on Eisenhower's grounds, where students can easily use them. Public money will pay for their upkeep. Parks officials are also considering a request from Pedersen to donate $5,000 for the school to buy eight computers. In return, Eisenhower would offer computer classes to the general public for a small...