Word: crediters
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...these are minor objections to a stimulating production by a group of professionals who deserve great credit for bringing good theatre to Boston...
Admittedly Schwartz gets a big assist from his actors, who are uniformly good. It is worth going just to see Kay Bourne. But Schwartz himself must get some of the credit for recognizing how fascinating even the simplest gesture can be, if well executed. I think, in fact, he was so fascinated he staged The Ladder to play to slowly; but he had the right idea...
Peralta turned to the country's businessmen, asked them what to do, and took their advice. He promoted new trade agreements with his neighbors, offered low-cost credit to farmers, expanded cotton production on Guatemala's rich Pacific slope. "That land is so rich in nitrogen," says one cotton grower, "that you could sack it and sell it for fertilizer." This year's income from Guatemala's major crops-coffee, cotton and bananas-should reach $134 million, 35% more than...
Britain wears a deceptive look of prosperity. Cash registers are ringing merrily in the nation of shopkeepers, and consumer credit is on the rise. Less than 2% of the work force is unemployed. Construction is booming...
...country has been heading toward a 1964 payments gap almost equal to its entire gold reserves. Throughout the postwar era, Britain's inability in periods of domestic prosperity to export enough to pay for its imports has meant recurring payments crises, pressure on the pound, and credit-tightening moves that have restricted economic growth...