Word: sized
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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After IndyMac failed, you said you didn't think institutions of any significant size were going to fail. To what extent were you wrong and to what extent was that being in a position where you have to smile? I was trying to provide some assurance in making that statement, and at that time things had not gotten as bad as they are now. I do think people need to understand that we are there and their insured deposits are protected and come what may they don't need to worry about that. Overall, banks are safe and sound. Some...
...packs of 36. In 2007, the Wall Street Journal reported that the average American uses 8.6 squares of toilet paper per bathroom visit, for a total of roughly 57 squares a day. Charmin Ultra has 264 squares per roll, which translates to about 30 bathroom visits. So one Costco-size pack of toilet paper overarms the eager customer with enough toilet paper to absorb more than 1000 bathroom visits. That, says Steven Stoll, is just plain excessive. In “The Great Delusion: A Mad Inventor, Death in the Tropics, and the Utopian Origins of Economic Growth...
...size of the Ad Board also came under scrutiny. Many in attendance agreed that a body with fewer members would make a difference to students appearing before the Ad Board. Participants also discussed whether the Ad Board should remain educational in nature or would be more effective as a judicial body...
...shopping for insurance a more consumer-friendly experience, Aetna asks how big a BodyGuard plan you need. WellPoint's Tonik line lets you decide whether you are a Thrill-Seeker, a Part-Time Daredevil or a Calculated Risk-Taker (choices that come down to less fun details like the size of your co-payment or deductible). Such edgy marketing aims to attract Americans ages 19 to 29--nearly a third of these so-called young immortals forgo insurance because they think they either don't need it or can't afford it. Carriers are also starting to target another demographic...
...forgers, crafty hucksters who seize on a believer's desire to possess material proof of the divine. In Jerusalem, it is a bountiful trade. The old adage is that if all the splinters of the True Cross were gathered from across Christendom, it would yield a wooden crucifix the size of a Manhattan skyscraper. Even back in the Middle Ages, pilgrims visiting Jerusalem told of hawkers who sold counterfeit bones and relics of saints...