danslevent wrote: » Owryan wrote: » Friend just finished college and graduation is in November. Only allowed 2 guests at the ceremony and you have to tell the college who you want to bring. Always an issue as graduates want to invite more. One of her friends is offering her 2 places for sale on FB. €50 each. In my university it was 50 pounds for each graduation ticket. After spending thousands on a masters, I was pissed offf
Owryan wrote: » Friend just finished college and graduation is in November. Only allowed 2 guests at the ceremony and you have to tell the college who you want to bring. Always an issue as graduates want to invite more. One of her friends is offering her 2 places for sale on FB. €50 each.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » B. Comm., right?
Mongfinder General wrote: » Right, enough of this tipping malarkey. A few years ago we were running an annual football forecast (weekly picks for premier league games and championship). It was €20 to enter but had about 100 people involved. One girl wanted to know what was happening with €2k pot during the season. As in, was it earning interest. The tight arse refused to hand over €20 on the basis that her money might earn minuscule interest to be paid out in prizes to the winners. The mind boggles with some people. Why even enter the competition?
mistersifter wrote: » f*ck that, I'd be reporting her to the university. That must be against their policy. If she has not got anyone to bring , she should tell the college and let them re-distribute the tickets to someone who wants to share their life achievement with family. PRetty sh*t to tout these IMO.
evolving_doors wrote: » No way the college would redistribute to some needy family: They'd have to hold a policy meeting to decide who would get the tickets, what criteria they would award them, appeals procedure, change of all notification material online and post. Possibly a lottery system.... but with rules and appeals procedure too. Screw that. Probably what would happen would be someone ringing the office pleading their case and the Secretary would tell em to ring a few days before the event and see if there were spares. By then families might have other commitments and couldn't hang around waiting. End result is the same, if the tickets aren't used they'd go in the bin. The student was doing someone a solid. €25 each ain't bad considering the overall cost of graduating ... meals after, gown, photos, possible overnight accommodation, travel. She's not forcing anyone to buy them either, and I'll bet open to a bit of haggling. It'd be similar to someone who can't go to a concert and offers tix for sale. Sure they'd be generous to give them away for free, but selling them ain't so stingy. Although maybe there is a price where it does become a bit scalpish.
Kolido wrote: » If she got the tickets free, then selling them is bad form. That's nothing like selling concert tickets which you originally would have purchased.
evolving_doors wrote: » What if you won the concert tickets? On the whole graduation is ALWAYS a shakedown. Its never free.
Kolido wrote: » If I was out nothing in the first place, I would give them away free.
sullivlo wrote: » I am just home from a trip to Liffey Valley. When I was in Penney’s there was a woman lashing sun cream (off the shelf) on to her kids. One of the kids asked why they couldn’t just buy their own, and the mother replied “why would we buy it when we can get it for free?” Buy sun cream FFS.
Purple Mountain wrote: » I know this is obvious but that's stealing. I hope the security guard got her on camera.
_Dara_ wrote: » That’s theft, not stinge. Another punter might not notice it’s not completely full and buy it. :mad:
Foweva Awone wrote: » I have a free travel card ... sometimes (like right now!) I hop on a random bus going anywhere, just to use the WiFi for a while.
The_Conductor wrote: » Honestly- its far easier to just go to the local library- and you don't end up in some random place wondering how to get home again...........
Foweva Awone wrote: » I do that too, it's not open Sundays though!
nuac wrote: » I think all public libraries are now open seven days a week
Rhyme wrote: » If thats Fingal Libraries you're talking about, they are testing the waters with that, leaving libraries open with no staff and the management expecting things to be all fine and dandy during that time and for the staff cleaning up the mess on a Monday morning. Big stinge from the LGMA (the people who run those libraries) and the latest in a long run of shitty behaviour.
The_Conductor wrote: » Honestly- its far easier to just go to the local library-
nuac wrote: I think all public libraries are now open seven days a week
FanadMan wrote: » Think it's a scheme they are trialling in Dublin and hope to push nationwide next year. Would be great cos my local council library has the strangest opening hours. They seem to change from week to week.
Purple Mountain wrote: » My local one has the luxury of a 4 day week.