Word: borrowings
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...dressers or provoked their boyfriends to jump on them." But the prospect of trying to support yet another child made her sick with worry. "My hair started coming out," she says. After many anxious days, she finally got an abortion last week after she was able to borrow the money...
Instead, Gates says "we've got to borrow a leaf from the right, which is exemplarily aware of the role of education in the reproduction of values." Gates just wants to reproduce the "correct" values. And why not? The alternative is the teaching of the present "aesthetic and political order," composed of the subjective experiences of white men, reconstituted in the texts of the canon...
...Morris Zapp is the only one--Stanley is very old friend of mine, and I did borrow some things from Stanley, who was notorious for writing his books on Milton while watching American football or baseball. But Morris Zapp is a kind of typical; figure, who has been "identified" with other academics--Leslie Fiedler or Harold Bloom or whatever. And it pleases me, because he is a representative type--and Stanley has rather encouraged the likeness, I think. On the whole, I'm very careful not to portray people--I don't write romans a clef, though Small World...
Economists and politicians of many stripes charge that the 1986 reforms have dragged down the U.S. economy by punishing hard work, thrift and investment while encouraging Americans to borrow and spend beyond their means. Council of Economic Advisers chairman Michael Boskin argues that the 1986 law "sharply reduced incentives for investment, and we're paying a price for that in slower < growth." Liberals attack the current system as both unfair and unproductive. Robert Shapiro, a domestic-policy adviser to Democratic presidential front runner Bill Clinton, charges that "our tax code has been encrusted with layer upon layer of distortions...
...real estate market was so hot that corporate land holdings were typically more valuable than the factories built on them. And since 59% of all Japanese own their own homes, the great surges in real estate values made nearly everyone feel wealthier. Many companies and some individuals began to borrow vast sums of capital for expansion, using their stock or real estate portfolios as collateral...