Word: budgeted
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...importance of this deal to the U. S. consists of its importance to Brazil. A credit of $120,000,000 is no great matter for the U. S. Government, accustomed to living on an $8,000,000,000 budget, but it means a great deal more to Brazil whose 1939 budget is $203,000,000. More significant than its size is the fact that the purpose of this credit is to enable Brazil to cut loose from Germany's economic apron strings, particularly Nazi Germany's barter policy...
...Union, which operates on its own budget, went into the red to the extent of only $3,423.81, and this was easily absorbed by a substantial credit balance built up when the Yardlings' hall was operating at a profit...
...save the system if further concessions are made to labor, and these seem inevitable. Moreover the University is committed to continue T. S. E. P. for at least another year. For this reason the University is negotiating for raises to take effect in September, thereby relieving this year's budget of unexpected burden and allowing time to consider and fix a new meal rate...
Next day War Minister Lieut. General Seishiro Itagaki stood up before a Parliament which just a few hours before the explosion had been told to shoot the Japanese budget skyhigh, appropriating 4,600,000,000 yen (about $1,242,000,000) for war. Expensive as the accident had been, said General Itagaki, it would "not interfere in any way . . . with the sacred war in China." Neither did the mysterious fire in December which razed an aviation training station at Yonago (cost: 150,000 yen) ; or, later, the explosion and fire which wrecked an Army powder factory at Maebashi...
...question is obviously one of finances. Since it is not operated for a profit, the Clinic has no funds for expansion; because the University budget has been reduced in all departments, no aid can be expected from that source; and the dream of an all-wise, beneficent alumnus has not yet materialized. Unpopular as it would doubtless be, a general tax on the student body appears to be the only practical solution; it would amount to only two dollars per student if levied on graduate men as well as the undergraduate body. No less pressing than the most urgent cavity...