Word: outlay
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...development, special grants to cities for landscaping, tree planting, park improvement "and other measures to bring beauty and nature to the city dweller." He also asked for continuation of the public-housing program, at the rate of 35,000 new units a year, and an increase in the federal outlay for urban renewal to $750 million annually by 1968, with an accompanying shift in emphasis from business and industrial districts to residential neighborhoods...
...billion payments surplus last year, nor by private investment, which was nearly offset by profits brought back home. The main burden on the dollar is the Government's $6.9 billion in foreign spending, and the biggest part of that is its $4.8 billion a year foreign-aid outlay. Businessmen like Watson argue that the world's money system should be reformed so that the U.S.'s financial strength would be measured, not by what it lends or gives away, but by what it actually owns or produces...
...this outlay is more than compensated for by the private building it has generated. Last week Urban Renewal Commissioner William L. Slayton reported proudly that, excluding the cost of land, approximately $6.90 of redevelopment investment is made for every $1 of federal grants...
Renewers of the city want not only to bring people back from the suburbs to shop, but back to town to live. Philadelphia is now devoting 50% of its renewal outlay to residential work not involving major demolition, and some of Bacon's most interesting labor on this level is to be found in Society Hill?so-called after the Free Society of Traders, which originally bought 20,000 acres there from William Penn, rather than the Social Register. Society Hill is studded with 18th century houses and historic landmarks, and Bacon opened up vistas around them by chopping...
...agreement that followed Stalin's death. The Rumanians had to insist that Khrushchev is but a responsive politician, attuned to the desires of of a people who, after 45 years of paying for their own industrialization, the War, and then the arms race, are unwilling to make another vast outlay at the expense of their own comfort and prosperity...