Word: unspent
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...would want to meet that sort of woman? For 80 years, playgoers have indicated that they are extremely interested in meeting Hedda. They want to know about everything that Miss Bloom fails to tell them: the source and force of her unspent passion, of her neurotic boredom, of her worship of her father, of her loathing for her husband and of many other intriguing things. The playwright has given the actress gold, but it lies under dark ground where she must assiduously dig. The degree of angst that Claire Bloom conveys could easily be relieved with a couple of aspirin...
...more than $11 million of income was reinvested as in past years despite the endowment growing by way of capital gains and gifts ($7 million of $33.5 million in gifts received last year was reinvested). The Faculty of Arts and Sciences alone has accumulated an $8 million surplus of unspent money front what was allotted them in previous budgets. Students have no say over how their tuition money is spent in terms of the quality of their education. This must change...
...going on for years as costs to students mushroom and new educational programs never begin. The Faculty of Arts and Sciences by itself has a surplus of $8.3 million yet it still must raise tuition for two deficits of less than $1 million. Harvard has a surplus fund of unspent "gifts for current use and other receipts for special purposes availed of" that totals $22.8 million...
...government and private enterprise to reach the long-elusive goal of providing good low-cost dwellings for the nation's poor and near poor. Over the past three decades, Washington has poured some $6.5 billion into housing subsidies and urban renewal, committed at least another $13 billion as yet unspent to the same controversial programs. Yet one recent White House report estimated that 8,300,000 Americans still cannot afford a decent place to live...
...Victoria has proved to be considerably more durable than the British Empire. The stage has become her throne and she has moved from history into legend. For Helen Hayes, the role was the apex of an acting career. For Dorothy Tutin, 37, whose dramatic resources are rich, varied and unspent, it is more like a tiara worn with casual ele gance. William Francis' Portrait of a Queen, which opened on Broadway last week, is not so much a play as a pastiche-part documentary chronicle, part dear-diary journal, part dusty archive of political feuds. Most attractively...