Word: loaned
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...doctor pay off his debts. At the first meeting, he raised over $600. Later meetings and a benefit supper got the total up to $1,200. Meanwhile, patients began to send in their checks−so well, at first, that Dr. Chalmers was able to pay back a $400 loan the clinic guild had given...
...collection of "old masters." Last week, addressing the gallery's Women's Committee, Director Eckhardt publicly announced the awful truth: The museum has been the victim of a mammoth hoax. Said he: "With the exception of the Canadian paintings and the eleven old German paintings on permanent loan, there is almost nothing which is really worthwhile in the permanent collection . . . The Titian is not a Titian, the Rubens is not a Rubens, and the Correggio not a Correggio...
Unwilling to continue its large scale capital exports, the Administration hopes that South American industry will route loan requests through civilian banking channels. Such loans would model inter-American business relationships on those of this country. Already the Export-Import Bank, the main agency for Washington's foreign loan arrangements, has diminished the flow of capital to private industry in South America. And this policy is a wise one. While loans to Latin governments for national improvements will continue, it is wrong for Washington to compete with private banking houses in a field that offers a legitimate area of profit...
...years of collecting, the Smith College Museum of Art (at Northampton, Mass.) has kept right up with the times. Among its purchases was a $100 canvas bought direct from Thomas Eakins (1844-1916), who now ranks among the handful of masters America has produced. This week a loan show of 27 more recent paintings in Smith's collection opened at the Portland (Ore.) Art Museum. As the American samples opposite and overleaf show, the collection neatly cross-sections contemporary painting...
...stock in the open market for about $950,000. But all voting rights and dividends were turned over to the Roy Fruehauf Foundation, Inc., which was incorporated in 1950 as a tax-free foundation to breed lead dogs for the blind. In effect, says Beck, this amounts to a loan to the foundation, and the teamsters' union is holding the stock as collateral...