Word: moneys
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...barely thinks about how much is being plunked down. If you catch yourself in this trap--ignoring your expenditures because, "hey, I'm just going to see a movie"--then it's probably a good idea to remind yourself exactly what this proposition consists of. You are paying good money for the privilege of spending two hours sitting down. Now this seems obvious enough, probably even condescending, but you'd be surprised what people will spend good money to sit down--and waste their time--in front...
...instance, if, for any reason, you find yourself about to pay to see The Bachelor, tell yourself that there simply must be a better way to use your time and money...
...population of scholars." How wonderfully...diverse. Also included, as if by afterthought, are a few randomly selected library policies. On laptop use: "Power hook-ups [for laptops] are available throughout the various facilities. It is advisable to check with each library regarding availability of service." After spending all that money to glorify this monolith of knowledge, the library tells me to call first. In truth, the sumptuous guide, with critical information either missing or strewn across 14 different pamphlets, is nearly useless as a reference...
...look like gifts, but end up in the trash or under stacks of paper that will later become trash. Because the Library failed to consider its audience, the package came off as awkward at best. To many, it was a sign (as if another were needed) that at Harvard, money comes first, followed later by a vague idea of the existence of undergraduates...
...Beatty doesn't raise enough money from his old girlfriends or convince anyone that "Bulworth" was a sign of good things to come, though, the presidential race will most likely come down to a Yale vs. Harvard rivalry. But we've already been there, done that. In 1988, Yale's secret society, Skull and Bones (of which Bush Sr. was a member) featured prominently in the strip, as did analysis of Gore's political and familial pressures in the Democratic primary. All the former Yale Daily News cartoonist has to do now is print re-runs for the next...