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Word: borrowing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...doing more for Harlem than the other, white-owned, banks. Hudgins claims that the bank makes long-term loans to Negroes which they cannot obtain from white banks. In practice, the degree and nature of such discrimination is difficult to measure, since many Negroes who would like to borrow have low incomes--median Negro income in New York City is a little more than half that of median white income--and cannot hope to measure up to the established credit standards for long-term, low-cost loans. Hudgins firmly believes that discrimination on all loaning for large amounts or long...

Author: By Suzanne M. Snell, | Title: Harlem's Freedom National Bank--Exploiters or Soul Brothers? | 7/5/1966 | See Source »

...money and was turned down by at least one bank on his loan application. In an effort to raise funds for the big deal, he started looking for a buyer for the Chronicle. With a signed contract to sell the paper, so the story went, he could easily borrow the cash he needed to pay off the Endowment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: A Deal Done In | 6/17/1966 | See Source »

...Clavell may have been only clearing his throat for this one, which seems every bit as long as it is. Its narrative pace is numbing, its style is deafening, its language penny dreadful. All the characters whirl like dervishes, especially Dirk Struan, a kind of Scottish superman who can borrow $5,000,000 in silver ingots from an Oriental tycoon, invent binoculars, and corner the world supply of cinchona bark, all without breathing very hard. Well, almost. His Scots accent wavers a bit under stress: "Damned if he'll get away with it, Will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bigger Than Life | 6/17/1966 | See Source »

...doing more for Harlem than the other, white-owned, banks. Hudgins claims that the bank makes long-term loans to Negroes which they cannot obtain from white banks. In practice, the degree and nature of such discrimination is difficult to measure, since many Negroes who would like to borrow have low incomes--median Negro income in New York City is a little more than half that of median white income--and cannot hope to measure up to the established credit standards for long-term, low-cost loans. Hudgins firmly believes that discrimination on all loaning for large amounts or long...

Author: By Suzanne M. Snell, | Title: Harlem's Freedom National Bank--Exploiters or Soul Brothers? | 5/27/1966 | See Source »

Until then, there is a small danger that in their enthusiasm to borrow from alien traditions, Catholic and Protestant experimenters may pass each other in opposite directions. Recently, an Episcopal priest gleefully told Diekmann how his own church had taken to the new practice of genuflecting during the Creed and the consecration of the elements. Diekmann heaved a weary sigh: Catholicism is just at the point of discarding the genuflection altogether...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liturgy: To Genuflect or Not to Genuflect? | 5/20/1966 | See Source »

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