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Branson believes Virgin America can make flying fun again and still make money. Here's what it does differently: [This article contains a table. Please see hardcopy of magazine.] BIG U.S. AIRLINES VIRGIN AMERICA In-flight service Delete some services. Charge as much as you can for the rest Charge for the things that enhance the trip, like good food Routes Lose money on hub-to-hub flights. Earn it on the feeder business Fly point to point to cities with high business and leisure traffic International links Try to create seamless global travel through alliances or investments One brand...
...animal rights, except as evidence of the excesses of secular radicalism. National polls show an inverse correlation between church attendance and support for animal rights. Churches celebrate the blessing of the animals on the feast day of Saint Francis of Assisi, and then largely ignore animal ethics for the rest of the year...
...first two goals of the period, a Harvard defender gave up a crucial turnover which led to the Big Green’s third unanswered point in a row. The Crimson was not able to recover from the beginning of the half, as the team trailed for the rest of the game, finally falling 11-7. Halpern ended the game with two goals and an assist, while Bancroft and Simmons each notched two goals. Curtis led the team in shots, with 6, but was unable to convert any into points, facing a tough Dartmouth goalie who blocked 10 and only...
...Harvard Jazz Band concert with trombonists Phil Wilson and Carl Fontana. And although Cramer, who would be come The Crimson’s president, expressed hope that “Monday night’s concert will signal the beginning of Harvard’s sprint to overtake the rest of the collegiate runners in a race to recognize jazz’s rightful place on campus,” not much has changed—at least by way of giving jazz greater prominence in the academic world. While jazz has yet to make a major appearance on Harvard?...
...display in his debut novel, “All the Sad Young Literary Men,” does establish him as a writer in the Russian model. It is not that Gessen sees no room for levity in “Literary Men”—rest assured, there are plenty of the witticisms that make reading his literary magazine, n+1, so enjoyable—but rather that he perceives literature not as just a means of entertainment, but as a powerful social force, an attitude that has its roots in the literary criticism of the great...