Word: lents
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Some lies should not be lent even the scant legitimacy of refutation. But in this case, it is important to realize what a vast falsehood has been advanced--and to recognize that the money taken from hungry children has, in effect, been transferred to the military...
...mind. The total debt of Third World nations to Western banks is approximately $300 billion. South American countries owe $71 billion to the U.S. Citibank, the largest U.S. bank, has made loans to Brazil alone worth fully 75 percent of its total capital. The nine largest U.S. banks have lent Third World nations more than twice their net worth--$64 billion. These concrete-and-steel Wall Street fortresses would be completely wiped out by a Latin American repudiation of all debt...
...only greed is left. Awash with petrodollars in the '70s, big banks lent to every comer with a flag and a UN seat. Confident that this type of lending wasn't subject to ordinary precautions applied to individual customers, bankers went far out on a limb. Now the bankers are equally confident that they've gone so far with the nation's wealth that the U.S. government will have to bail them out if worse comes to worse. Attached to the recent emergency Congressional approbation for the International Monetary Fund were new regulations concerning just that. Congress should be ready...
...have tricks in my pockets. I have things up my sleeve." With these first words from The Glass Menagerie, his Broadway debut in 1945, Tennessee Williams announced his dramatic strategies and asserted his mastery of verbal magic. To the American theater Williams lent a firefly glow through which audiences could see into the dissolving past, into the long nights of desire and failure. For the next 35 years, directors took their cue from Williams' own lazy flights of self-destruction, from his wispy-wise, Percy Dovetonsils voice, and launched productions of his plays on gossamer wings toward the aerie...
...allowed to hurl accusations at each other or criticize the regime. Political wall posters and graffiti were banned, and party members could display their loyalties only with discreet lapel pins. Virtually all politicians who had held elected office prior to the 1980 coup, including former Prime Ministers Bülent Ecevit and Siileyman Demirel, were forbidden to run. More than 500 of the candidates for seats in parliament were stricken from the ballot without explanation...