Word: loaned
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
However, this is only a partial explanation of how our families work. Most families, all small businesses, and certainly most students at Harvard don't balance their accounts at the end of each month. Anyone who has taken an education, car, or home loan understands that sometimes you have to spend more than you are taking in at one point to give you greater earning ability or comfort at a later date. The Balanced Budget Amendment would prevent the government from doing the same...
...used hers because it was on the top of my mind." He says the violence he expressed was a product of stress. "This would not have got written had I not been fearful about my future at the university. I had a lot of anxiety about my student loan,'' he says. Baker is anxious about coming back to school, and insists he will pursue psychological counseling even if the university does not require it. But above all, he wants to be a writer-the kind who gets noticed. "The worst insult to a writer is for people to have...
...serve on the management team that ran the bank's daily business and thus knew nothing of any improprieties. Gustavo, who has not been implicated in the scandal, told that his brother was ``an outside director who got minimal information and wasn't a member of any loan committee.'' Nonetheless a second arrest warrant was issued last week for Ricardo and 18 other former Banco Latino directors, this time for embezzling public funds. The new charges carry a prison sentence of two to 10 years. - Orlando Castro, a Cuban refugee who owned businesses in half a dozen countries, including...
...sophomore said he was informed by his financial aid advisor that he would be given a grace period by the Administrative Board while he waited for a response to his application for a loan. But he was informed by his senior tutor last week that he had not been granted the extension, and that he would be required to meet the Tuesday deadline...
...world's leading arms merchant." Like its predecessors, he says, the Administration still "allows a wide variety of weapons to be sold to a wide variety of nations." Defense contractors did come up one short on their wish list, though: The White House refused to continue U.S. loan guarantees to foreign countries, though contractors insisted some nations need financial help to purchase American-made weapons...