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Spring has Spring
I believe that spring has finally arrived. The panhandlers and the wackos are out in full force.
I saw a very interesting sight on my way back from lunch today. A guy in an SL500, convertible top down. Had a sheet on his head - draped like it was scarf. He was very tan - probably darker skinned originally - had HUGE gold sunglasses with large gold frames - the sides looked like gold nugget but it was hard to tell. He was shirtless - and athletic looking. No chest hair. I guess I could have asked him if he shaved or waxed, but by the lack of discussion on personal grooming on the FB, I probably would not have gotten a response. The sheet - white, looked like enough fabric to be a flat, twin sheet - was attached to his sunglasses with large gold clips. And by large I mean money clip large. He appeared to have no hair on his head. But a very large gold watch - looked like nugget jewelry. I've never seen a sheet worn on a head like this. It was odd. |
Spring has Spring
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Spring has Spring
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2. Legs 3. Balls 4. All of the above. The rest of you guys are chicken shits. Not 1 single response other than the sarge here. |
Spring has Spring
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I don't shave. |
Spring has Spring
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google ipo
who's handling it?
ETA - nevermind. Simpson Thatcher reps underwriters, Wilson Sonsini reps google. Here's the filing - http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/da...tm#toc16167_20 |
SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
Crisis at Boalt Hall
CARRYING signs with slogans such as "Don't Terminate My Future," and "Raise Taxes Not Fees," Boalt Hall School of Law students gathered yesterday in their verdant courtyard on the UC Berkeley campus to protest a $5, 000 fee increase Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wants to impose on them this fall -- on top of another $3,000 fee increase this year. The fee increase will push the bill at Boalt this fall to $22,500 a year, not including room and board. Schwarzenegger's rationale for the exorbitant increase is that most law graduates will earn "significantly higher income levels after graduation than other graduates." But conversations with students show that many were admitted to Boalt precisely because they don't want to go work for a private firm, but are committed to public-interest law which pays far less. Many students are already carrying huge debts. First-year student Freeda Yllana, 24, had hoped to get a job dealing with domestic violence or environmental law when she graduates. She took out a $27,000 loan just to get this far, calculating she would end up with loans totaling just under $100,000 by the time she graduates. But now she thinks that the latest fee increases -- sprung on students after they had already enrolled -- will make that an impossible goal. "It's really unfair to put a $5,000 tax on me," she says. What especially rankles many of the students is that none of the new fees will go to improve their education at Boalt, but instead will just disappear into the bottomless money pit in Sacramento. |
SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
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google ipo
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SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
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IMHO, if they're going to raise tuitions, the tuition should go directly to the school where the tuition is being raised. Money raised and collected by the government can go to a lot of places, but it seems to make more sense to allocate those funds to be spent in areas with as close ties as possible to where they are taken, and funds from any tuition hike (whether at Boalt or Vacaville Community College) should at least go to the relevant school or related school system. C(anyways, I thought Republicans were for letting all the higher-income people keep all their money because it helps commerce)deuced |
Spring has Spring
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SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
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google ipo
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SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
Originally posted by sgtclub
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It's great how no one wants to pay for the poor to have legal services. Most lawyers don't want to provide the poor legal work. (The pro bono they do, if any, isn't to help the poor it's to do things like prevent garbage dumps and prisons in their neighborhoods.) Taxpayers don't want to pay lawyers to do it. The minority of lawyers that want to give the poor legal work want the public or other lawyers to subsidize their desire to help the poor. |
SF Chronicle editorial on Boalt Hall
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No firm has ever broken up over a struggle between partners who want to do more pro bono work and partners who want to do none. Instead, they break up over the far more venial --- and eternal --- debate between those who want to do more contingency work and those who want to do none, going to show you that lawyer A will not tolerate subsidizing the draw of lawyer B in any given year, even when there is indisputably an enormous payoff at the end of the subsidy. You can imagine how much harder it is to foster long term return thinking when the payoff of pro bono is more ethereal, like the firm's ability to land government hourly work or draw qualified minority associate applicants. |
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