Word: lende
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...Education Act of 1965 which was passed last October, limited the interest rate on such loans to 6 per cent. Rep. John Brademas (D-Ind.) and the other critics of the plan have argued that this might make it difficult for students to secure loans, since banks would rather lend the money elsewhere at a higher interest rate...
Brademas, a member of the House Committee on Education and Labor, predicted that students would have difficulty securing loans under the projected system. "There is a tight money market now," he explained, "and banks will be unwilling to lend money to students when they can lend it elsewhere at higher interest...
...filming, the camera's merciless eye often annihilates the indispensable illusion of theater, leaping the distance that might lend more credibility to Olivier's thundercloud performance. His makeup looks false, and through the blackface gleams a supreme actor's intelligence, timing every phrase, calculating effects, revealing the mechanics of his trade in monstrous closeups. It is a spectacular display of virtuosity, but seldom very real or deeply moving or quite subservient to the Moor...
Hudgins' job now is to find enough money to lend, especially since he plans to open a branch in Bedford-Stuyvesant, New York's other big Negro ghetto. To help attract new deposits, he preaches Sundays in Harlem churches. His invariable sermon subject: the virtue of thrift...
...reluctant Reds are pretty much ignored. Munk's antihero (Edward Dziewonski) is a self-seeking womanizer who cynically boasts that he survived the occupation by "buying and selling." He shares his easy-to-bed wife (Barbara Polomska) with an enemy Hungarian officer, learns that the fleeing Hungarians will lend men and guns to help the Polish Home Army. Before the Poles refuse, the drunken, don't-give-a-damn patriot hustles messages back and forth, so ludicrous a target that a thundering German tank blasts him only with derision. At one point, he joins a long line...