Word: repaying
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Delay in any court results in injustice. It makes lawsuits a luxury available only to the few who can afford them or who have property interests to protect which are sufficiently large to repay the cost. . . . The Supreme Court is laboring under a heavy burden. Its difficulties in this respect were superficially lightened some years ago by authorizing the Court, in its discretion, to refuse to hear appeals in many classes of cases. This discretion was so freely exercised that in the last fiscal year, although 867 petitions for review were presented to the Supreme Court, it declined to hear...
John L. Lewis' crude presentation of his campaign I. O. U. to Franklin Roosevelt last fortnight, his demand that the President now repay his political debt to Mr. Lewis by joining him in his war on General Motors (TIME, Feb. 1), put the New Deal in a highly uncomfortable position. By forcing the President to hand the C. I. O. chieftain a veiled but unmistakable rebuke, it left the New Deal appearing to side, against 3,500,000 friends, with those onetime pillars of the Liberty League, Alfred P. Sloan Jr. and the du Ponts...
INCOME1936 1935 Investment income distributed to endowment funds $5,142,935.97 $4,998,217.83 Less income from restricted endowment funds not available for use, reserved for use in future years, or applied to repay advances made in previous years 345,731.66 289,203.13 $4,797,204.31 $4,709,014.70 Plus amounts withdrawn from accumulated income of restricted endowment funds and amounts advanced against the income of future years 89,095.60 163,914.90 4,886,299.91 4,872,929.60 Less paid and payable therefrom to life beneficiaries of trusts 215,834.19 162,429.27 Total Income from endowment funds...
...this increase because there are several billion dollars of recoverable assets-chiefly loans made by the Government which will be repaid. However, as these loans are repaid, the Government is not using the money to pay off the debt. It is in fact treating the repay ments as income and spending them. "If the subtraction of recoverable assets from the gross debt is valid," wrote Editor Moley, "then the Treasury's handling of these receipts is, to use a charitable word, unsound. . . . Democratic orators should refrain from leading their listeners to believe that...
...increase in the national income and asks whether the money spent was not a good investment. But the national income is figured as the sum of all individual incomes and there fore includes the expenditures of the Government. "Government expenditures are not part of the national ability to repay deficits...