Word: reasonable
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...through the latest Chekhov revival or pretentious little comedy about tightly wound New York singles, is the Broadway-musical revival. Yes, you can complain - as I often have - about unimaginative commercial producers who keep recycling surefire classics like Gypsy or Guys and Dolls. But there's good reason they're recycled so often: they are surefire - unfailingly entertaining, no matter how uninspired the production, the indomitable high points of a genre that is America's great contribution to world theater. (Read TIME's 1998 article "The Magician of the Musical...
...International Money Laundering Abatement and Financial Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001 makes it illegal for a bank to accept funds it knows, or has reason to believe, were derived from fraud. In addition, it's obliged to report its suspicions to authorities. A tangle of federal and state agencies could investigate such potential banking duplicity, but for national banks like JPMorgan Chase the first overseer is the Department of the Treasury's Office of the Comptroller of Currency. OCC examiners conduct on-site reviews of national banks and provide supervision of bank operations. For OCC to investigate, it must first...
...Except for some contract lawyers, very few people would argue that the portion of the AIG bonuses that was for employee retention are fair. The only reason the company isn't in receivership is because the government deemed it was "too big to fail." Fearing the financial market would be dealt a horrible blow if it went bankrupt, the government has provided AIG with several loans to prevent its untimely demise...
...types of things, and what came to mind was homicides and suicides. We knew it happened in people's homes, and we sort of figured they were doing this themselves. Eighty percent of these cleanups still, even today, get cleaned up by families themselves. And there's just no reason for it, because what we do is all covered by homeowner's insurance. There's no excuse for anybody to have to do this themselves, especially when it's essentially free to them...
...There's a good reason why Thomas, 24, doesn't give out his last name: he is concerned that his bosses at a nearby bank may not like his unconventional hiking attire, consisting of shoes, socks, a backpack - and nothing else. Thomas isn't just some nature nut in a birthday suit - he's one of a growing number of hikers who make the pilgrimage to Appenzell specifically so they can trek in the nude. (See pictures of skiing...