The golf course is a good public amenity but I would query whether it could be run in a way that at least allows it to break even. |
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That seemed almost obscene to someone who was used to graduate assistantships that were essentially break even propositions. |
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We needed to make changes, not necessarily to make money off the student groups but to break even. |
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A lot of its activities either break even or lose money in order to attract visitor interest here. |
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Of course, Egg's plans to break even depend on its Web site functioning and fully operational. |
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The object of the product sales via the net is aimed at initially helping to break even and somewhere down the track we might even make a profit. |
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The sequel broke the record set by its money-spinning predecessor and looks well placed to break even more over the Independence Day weekend in the States. |
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If you break even or come out on the plus side, know that you are lucky and go do your homework. |
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The user claimed that its profit margin was already very low and close to break even. |
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One must ask if it will reach a large enough public in order to break even. |
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For 2009, we expect to break even, thanks to an increase in discharged volumes of 300,000 tonnes. |
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However, many other organizations are expecting to break even or have a surplus. |
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At that point, Lintott says he was ready to break even on his hay crop and was hoping for a couple more good days to put his books in the black. |
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It spells out to the business owner the money needed to be earned to break even and then show a profit. |
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For example, it could be due to a weak ROI, or a break even point too far away to be attractive for the company. |
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This brings DNS BE a step closer to its objective of achieving a break even situation. |
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The changes announced on Thursday would bring clarity to the management structure and would facilitate changes which would help the station break even in the coming year. |
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Batchelor said he was confident of City attendances of 5,440 next season to break even, particularly as season ticket sales had got off to a flying start. |
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So now, thanks to these loaf-shaped sticky notes, you can break even the worst news and not worry about overly upsetting anyone. |
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That makes retaining the tax break even more crucial, said Gene Russianoff of the Straphangers Campaign. |
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In 2004, its third year of activity, Asco Leven was already at break even. |
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The BRICS have proved challenging: Mr Tavares aims to break even in Russia and Latin America in 2017 but it is a tall order. The fourth target is the whopper: improving competitiveness. |
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We could run out of cash next year, says Mr Potter. Last month the postal service issued a report outlining proposals to help it break even and beseeching Congress to approve them. |
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Adjustments made to the sales structures in response to the requirements of this booming market have enabled the young subsidiary in the Near East to break even after just one year. |
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A well-made slab will not break even with several people dancing on it. |
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All these factors, together with the costs of loss adjustment, can make agricultural indemnity insurance a very costly business, difficult to make profitable or indeed to break even. |
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For a mobile clinic, how many donors do they need to break even? |
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The goal of the LTD plan is to break even. |
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As a cow needs at least two years to grow from calf to cow and makes no contribution to profit during this time, she clearly needs at least three lactations for the farmer to break even just on the cost of raising the cow. |
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Most software makers don't even break even. |
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As each division of the NHS is required to break even at the end of each financial year, the service should in theory never be in deficit. |
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While underpricing cannot remove the allocation bias against uninformed investors, the uninformed can now expect, on average, to at least break even. |
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University of Arkansas Medical Sciences Medical Center in Little Rock expects to break even for the year after generally running a deficit as a safety net hospital. |
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It's a lot of work just to break even and keep the weeds down. |
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James took a step forward, his dark eyes bright under that jutting hedgerow of a brow that swept across his forehead without a break even above his axeblade of a nose. |
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So when will the station break even after this costly investment? |
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Despite the restructuring, The Economist reported in 1998 that to break even Eurotunnel would have to increase fares, traffic and market share for sustainability. |
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CfIT estimated that the fare required for Midland Metro to break even was twice that of Manchester Metrolink, London Tramlink and the Tyne and Wear Metro. |
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