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Word: exempt (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...claims that Moon failed to pay taxes on $162,000 interest on a $1.8 million Chase Manhattan Bank account. Moon says that he was holding the money in trust for his church, an established legal practice known as corporation sole, and that the money should therefore have been tax-exempt. (Curiously, Moon did pay personal taxes on the bulk of the account...

Author: By Theodore P. Friend, | Title: Moon's Financial Rise and Fall | 10/11/1984 | See Source »

Under a program designed to revitalize downtrodden commercial zones, the developer has requested $3 million in tax-exempt Industrial Revenue Bonds...

Author: By Thomas J. Winslow, | Title: Local Residents Halt Building With City's Aid | 9/18/1984 | See Source »

Turk argues it is fair to ask more of Harvard than other landowners. Since Harvard benefits from the public through its tax-exempt status, the University should make its investments so that they will benefit the community as a whole as well as itself. Turk says...

Author: By Michael F.P. Dorning, | Title: The Politics of Housing | 9/17/1984 | See Source »

...William Safire and Patrick Buchanan were Nixon speechwriters. Only Salinger and Buchanan had previously worked on newspapers. Bailey recalls the "spectacular stumble" of syndicated conservative Columnist George F. Will, who, when criticized for helping coach his friend Ronald Reagan for the 1980 debate with Jimmy Carter, said he felt exempt 5 from the rules of neutrality because he was not a "journalist." (About to become a regular commentator on ABC's World News Tonight, Will describes himself as "reformed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newswatch Thomas Griffith: Sins of Celebrity Journalism | 7/16/1984 | See Source »

...find a different financial base. Both these matters, when embodied in a plan that was made public in 1976, caused some livery controversy. To get more money, the museum came up with the idea of a 44-story tower of luxury apartments, an unprecedented step for a tax-exempt institution that, in the view of Architecture Critic Ada Louise Huxtable, proved "the most artful real estate deal ever devised." Reckoning in the six floors that constitute the base of the tower but belong to the museum, the exhibition space has now more than doubled, from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Revelation on 53rd Street | 5/14/1984 | See Source »

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