Word: borrowing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...urge behind Hairy Men is human enough-sex. Two college boys and their girl friends borrow a Greenwich Village artist's studio for a weekend in hopes of satisfying that urge. They never do. The unalterable code of the bogus sex comedy forbids it: beds are props, not stops. It would be a joke to call Playwright Hunter's dialogue comic, though an attractive young cast paced by a wry comedienne named April Shawhan pumps stray laughs into the saggy script...
Easier to Borrow. The U.S. would rather reform the monetary system by expanding the lending powers of the IMF. One of Washington's pet ideas is to vastly increase the IMF's lendable funds and make it easier for countries to borrow those funds to settle international debts. The IMF is in the midst of increasing its reserves from $15.8 billion to $21 billion; last week the Senate Banking Committee voted to boost the U.S.'s contribution to the IMF from $4.1 billion to $5.2 billion. The snag is that France has refused to raise its contributions...
Delightful Puff. Playing variations on a theme comes naturally to a jazz musician. Rivers has carried much of this facility over into his painting. As jazz will use parts of a familiar tune to take off for bluer skies, Rivers is content to borrow bits of the old masters or leave parts of his painting unfinished and out of focus. Sometimes he will simply jot down on the canvas notations to color an area ocher or blue and then not bother coloring it. By this, he is leaving hints at the process of art as a form of living improvisation...
...Disclosed that he recently had to borrow money to help pay his 1964 federal income tax as well as the first quarter estimate on his 1965 tax, both of which totaled some $100,000. As President, Johnson receives a taxable salary of $100,000, along with a taxable expense account of $50,000. After standard deductions, the tax on the combined $150,000 would equal about $79,466, which means that Johnson, like many of his predecessors, does not necessarily have to depend on his salary for a living...
...afford the great waste that comes from the neglect of a single child." He evoked the memory of one of his great-grandfathers, declaring that because of low teacher salaries his ancestor, even though he was the third president of Baylor University, had suffered financial penury, had had to borrow $300 from Sam Houston "at 8% interest...