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170 Sentences With "lent out"

How to use lent out in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lent out" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lent out". Mastering all the usages of "lent out" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The store also lent out books for a small fee.
Since 2002, the original daguerreotypes have not been lent out.
Millions of euros are lent out this way every year.
He had parties where girls were lent out during the evening.
Trucks are occasionally lent out for fan events, food drives and other needs.
Instead, the holders of the shares that were lent out will be paid.
MGM lent out the use of one of its top costume designers, Helen Rose.
Vanguard said it only lent out securities in the ordinary course of its business.
"Before you know it, I'm being lent out to politicians and academics and royalty," Giuffre said.
Amazon recently announced that it has lent out $1 billion in small loans in the past year.
By this time I had reread and lent out the book enough that the binding started to strain.
They worked in a group at the bank responsible for investing depositors' money that isn't being lent out.
But it had lent out a lot of that money to oil companies and to Nigeria's floundering power sector.
Instead of worrying about extra keys floating around that you lent out but never got back, you can simply disable access.
For inflation to continue running up, cash needs to remain in the banking system where it can be lent out, he said.
They can deposit the money in the group's lockbox, and then it is lent out to another group member, earning them interest.
As of September 30, Goldman has lent out about $10 billion, and customers had $736 million in loan balances, the filings show.
Mr. Wong joined Warner Brothers in 1942, working there — and lent out on occasion to other studios — until his retirement in 1968.
Deposits have become more important for bank funding in recent years; governments have become increasingly fussy about how the money is lent out.
But some 9 percent of Valeant's shares were lent out to short sellers betting that the stock would go down, according to the bank.
That audit uncovered that the Fed lent out a whopping $16 trillion to domestic and foreign banks during the financial crisis without congressional approval.
The charity also lent out employees to do work for the for-profits, charging the companies hundreds of thousands of dollars in management fees.
Throughout 853, the UK-based marketplace lender lent out £1.6 billion ($2 billion) to small businesses via its platform, per Funding Circle's annual results.
Svetlana bought half a kilogram of loose tea and asked in exaggeratedly correct Russian if it was true that the store lent out videotapes.
It was in NASA's custody after it returned from its lunar mission, but was lent out to the Cosmosphere, a space museum in Kansas.
They were lent out, things were negotiated for them, and they were really just pawns in whatever game the studio head was trying to play.
She leads workshops where others — including those who can't attend protests for similar reasons — make banners that are lent out to protesters around the country.
The finance ministry reckons big microfinance institutions have lent out 282bn rupees ($0003bn), but it has no data for the many smaller lenders that operate.
New York (CNN Business)Goldman Sachs has lent out about $833 billion in credit to Apple customers so far, according to its recent regulatory filing.
The bank has already lent out over $2 billion through Marcus, said Chavez, speaking at the Bank of America Merrill Lynch financials conference in New York.
With a quarter of its publicly traded shares lent out to facilitate short-sellers' bets, Tesla is one of the most heavily shorted companies in America.
The BOJ would prefer if some of the funds parked in the bond market were instead lent out to companies or consumers, helping drive economic growth.
So they call people like Hyland, who has lent out the fourth-floor gym in Haaren Hall to Wake Forest, Marquette, Notre Dame and Villanova this week.
"The counterfactual would have been that a trillion dollars or 2 trillion would have been lent out had these rules been changed five years ago," he said.
OnDeck Capital, a small business lender, has lent out over $7 billion since being founded in 2007 and over $1 billion in the first half of this year.
Even as deposits grew, the portion it lent out also rose to 66 percent, compared with 61 percent a year ago and 64 percent in the prior quarter.
This is nothing compared to the $100 billion that gets lent out every year, or the $50 billion in annual profits that the government makes on the program.
He's right that banks have spare lending capacity: the industry has lent out just 79 percent of its deposits, according to data last month from the Federal Reserve.
Lebanese banks have been promising — and paying out — exorbitant interest rates to big depositors from the interest earned on the money they have lent out to the state.
So far this year, SoFi has lent out $234 billion, up from the $5.2 billion it originated all of last year, and the $1.3 billion it did in 2014.
Zopa says it has lent almost £4 billion to consumers in the U.K. since it launched — £1 billion of that has been lent out in the last 12 months alone.
And if the progression toward messaging is fully realized, then attention will migrate into a conversation, which would require a transformation of how people's attention is lent out to others.
Fittingly called the Art Camera, the extremely high-resolution robots will be lent out to museums for free, and photos taken with them will appear on Google's online Culture Institute.
According to a September 2016 FDIC report, the average big bank had a leverage ratio of 5.6 percent, meaning it had $5.60 in capital for every $100 it lent out.
The warriors have become a major draw for international tourists, and some are lent out for exhibitions around the world, including a recent one at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.
The ECB and the euro zone's national central banks received cash worth 18.1 billion euros on the average April day in return for bonds lent out under the scheme, the data showed.
Not every dollar borrowed by emerging-market firms has been used to invest; some of the money ended up in bank accounts (where it can be lent out again) or financed other firms.
When the government spends, they argue, that adds more money to private bank accounts and increases the amount of "reserves" (cash the bank has stocked away, not lent out) in the banking system.
On every day in September except one the central bank has lent out all of its holdings of the current 10-year note issue, which was sold for the first time in August.
It has $150 billion of customer deposits but has so far lent out less than half that amount — though it grew at a fast clip of 26 percent compared with last year's third quarter.
The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions also proposed rules requiring a stress test for all uninsured mortgages and that the maximum amounts lent out against a property's value are adjusted for local market conditions.
By early August, Mr. Justus said, he was "on a steal to the homicide squad" — meaning that though he was a robbery detective, he had been lent out to work on the Son of Sam case.
Assets under management at Europe-focused funds increased from a mere $330m at the end of 2006 to $73.3bn by mid-2017, which includes $27.9bn of "dry powder", or funds yet to be lent out (see chart).
Banks lent out more than 9 trillion yuan ($13 trillion) in new local-currency loans in the first half, Zhou Liang, vice chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (CBIRC), told a media briefing on Thursday.
Imagine, in a hundred years' time, that you wish to discover what great libraries once looked and smelled like, how they maintained their fabled churchlike hush, how they lent out and stamped books, and exactly what shelves were for.
Jewelry can tell as big a story as a dress, and — if you want to talk about rewearing — the same piece is oftentimes lent out to many different stars throughout the years, because of its high price and exclusivity.
The ECB and the euro zone's national central banks received cash worth 18.1 billion euros on an average April day in return for the bonds they had lent out, less than half the scheme's maximum size of 50 billion euros.
The nonprofit has engaged in potential self-dealing with its top executives, stockpiled tens of millions of taxpayer dollars and lent out millions for real estate purchases, acting more like a bank than a traditional charity, according to records and interviews.
Tesla plans to run a company-owned fleet of autonomous vehicles to pick up passengers wherever or whenever there are not enough customer cars to be lent out, he said comparing this service to the peer-to-peer lodgings business of Airbnb.
And since schools aren't exactly forgiving environments for a lent-out device, how well the iPad holds up to drops and dings, and how expensive it is to fix, are bound to be factors in a school's decision on which devices to adopt.
Meanwhile, Esme lent out £100 million ($131 million) to UK SMBs as of December 2019 — up from £50 million ($65 million) in May — and is aiming to double its lending this year, suggesting that incumbents are looking to offer SMBs better-tailored services.
All told, private debt funds have amassed a $160bn war chest of capital that has not yet been lent out, twice what they had a decade ago and enough to support perhaps $360bn of business lending once bank debt is added on top.
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - The European Central Bank's bonds-for-cash scheme, through which government debt bought as part of the ECB's 2.3 trillion euros stimulus program is lent out against cash, has yet to reach even half its maximum size, ECB data showed on Monday.
They take short-term deposits from savers and give them out to borrowers for longer terms; pool assets to reduce risk and sell them on to investors; and—most mysteriously to outsiders—turn the credit they extend into assets that can be lent out again.
The U.S. Federal Reserve's quantitative easing policies brought interest rates in the U.S. to historic lows, thus enabling speculators to transport low-rate credit to China, where it was lent out in the shadow banking sector at interest rates of 8 percent or more.
The appeals panel, however, found that "the attorney general was a participant in al-Nashiri's case from start to finish: He has consulted on commission trial procedures, he has lent out one of his lawyers and he will play a role in defending any conviction on appeal."
When that happens, the realities of our "fractional banking" system become all too apparent: Our money is not in the bank and never has been in the bank; it's been lent out to many different entities, which often don't have to pay it back for years.
And these startups are growing in size — iwoca has pledged to make £5 billion ($6.5 billion) available to small businesses by 2023, up from the £1 billion ($1.3 billion) it had lent out as of November 2019 — suggesting that fintechs will be able to serve more SMBs in the future.
Get there quickly, because the muscular little depictions of beaches, sunsets, and domestic scenes, never lent out and rarely exhibited, will be up for only five months; a new refurnishing of the Peacock Room with the sort of blue and white Chinese Kangxi porcelain that Leyland had intended to put in it will remain indefinitely.
The couple met cheering crowds who braved the first rain showers an unusually sunny Ireland has seen in weeks at Trinity College, Ireland's oldest university which was founded with a charter from Queen Elizabeth I. Some students lent out of windows around the university's grand courtyard to catch a glimpse and a photo of the pair.
Works from her collection are often lent out to shows across the globe, and in 2014 the first exhibition of her collection outside Poland was shown at the Santander Art Gallery in Madrid; the show, "Everybody is Nobody for Somebody," showed works by Polish artists including Miroslaw Balka and Zofia Kulik along with international names like Olafur Eliasson and Antoni Tàpies.
I was kind of the lowest man on the totem pole at the NIH where, during the WTO negotiations — Mickey Kantor was the U.S. trade rep, mid-'90s, '94, '95 — to be detailed, and I got lent out by the NIH to the U.S. trade representative's office to work on the intellectual property chapter of the WTO, which at the time was called the GATT.
And as of the end of September 2019, Goldman lent out around $10 billion to customers, and some of the bank's executives described the product as the "most successful credit card launch ever," per the FT. As Goldman bids to swell its retail business, which accounted for less than 3% of revenue last year, the product gives it direct access to Apple's 100 million US customers — which is particularly valuable, considering the bank lacks the physical branch network its legacy bank rivals have.
In the "reserves first" model of money creation, a given reserve is lent out by a bank, then deposited at a bank (possibly different), which is then lent out again, the process repeating and the ultimate result being a geometric series.
Due to its size, importance, and value, the painting is not lent out for exhibition.
The regiment's (3rd Battalion) earned the sobriquet Butler's Battlin' Blue Bastards derived from the name of its single commander, its special fighting abilities, the battalion's color designation, and because the regiment was often lent out and belonged to no one.
Aguilera filed a suit against Warlock Records and the album's producers to stop the release. The two parties came to a confidential settlement to release the album, in which Aguilera lent out her name, likeness, and image for an unspecified amount of damages.
The World Scout Jamboree worked with Canon, a main sponsor. Four live action cameras were set around the camp, and Canon had a stall in the science activity module. The company also lent out 10 EOS kissx8i DSLR cameras (currently not on the market) to the young correspondent program.
He reprised his role as Peter in Demetrius and the Gladiators (1954) and was lent out for Mambo (1954). In Désirée (1954), Rennie played the future Charles XIV John of Sweden opposite Marlon Brando as Napoleon Bonaparte. The film was popular though is not as highly regarded as other Brando films from this time.
In practice, though, cash leakages occur in the form of sums of money borrowed from banks but not re-deposited, and in the form of funds deposited in banks but not lent out. Cash leakage, in this case, lowers the ability of credit creation.Ngai, J. et al., Economics and You 5, Manhattan, Hong Kong, 2005.
Iero's parents split when he was young and he grew up living with his mother, who lent out her basement to her son's many band practices; his father and grandfather were musicians and both were big influences on Iero when he was young. His father urged him to play drums, but Iero later began playing the guitar.
Several similar models followed and were lent out for test drives with favorable results.Richard Stepler, "Coming: Speedy Electric Delivery", Popular Science, January 1993, pg. 32 (sidebar) A total of 80 to 105 "production-prototype" sulfur-powered Ecostars were hand-built starting in 1993, and used in fleet trials with a number of customers starting the next year.
This program lent out a total $738 billion before it was closed. 45 out 81 of the companies participating in this program were foreign firms. Research shows that Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) recipients were twice as likely to participate in the program than other commercial paper issuers who did not take advantage of the TARP bailout.
The funds could charge interest on their loans, so they would only be used by people who expected to earn a reasonable return. Other loan funds were started, some for profit and some charitable. These funds accepted interest-bearing deposits and lent out money. Sometimes they charged rates above the legal maximum and paid large salaries, in effect acting as poorly regulated banks.
Itabashi Traffic Park has a mini-cycling course and it lends out bicycles and foot- operated go-karts (free of charge) to children over 5 years old so that they can go around the course. There is also an infant area for all children including those under 5 years old to ride bicycles and tricycles (also lent out by the park).
She mentioned that the Wigginses had a good lot of parsnips, so Ruth decided to send over the neighbor's son to buy some parsnips from the Wigginses. The next day Mr. Wiggins arrived and apologized, saying he’d lent out their horse earlier because he didn’t know about the dinner invitation. As a result, the Wigginses had no transportation and could not have dinner with the Whitmans.
Following the 2008 financial crisis, Quantitative Easing raised the amount of reserves in the banking system, as the Reserve Banks purchased bad debt from the banks, paying for it with Reserves. This has left the banking system with an oversupply of reserves. This increase in reserves has had no effect on the level of interest rates. Note that reserves are never lent out by banks.
Tree bark sales, too, brought good earnings until 1890. Municipal councillors in those days behaved like bankers. The earnings were lent out to interest-paying borrowers in the area and partly also invested in fixed-interest bonds. In 1825, the municipality made a building – a herdsman's house – available as a Schullocal (roughly “branch school”) for the first time. In 1842, the first new schoolhouse was built.
External ethics are concerned with the wider ramifications of banks actions. External ethics looks at the impacts that their business practices, such as who they loan to or invest in, will have on society and the environment. In applying external ethics, one looks at how the products of banks can be used unethically, for example how borrowers use the money that is lent out by the bank.
Before joining Lillestrøm in 2006, he played for Rosenborg, Bodø/Glimt and Tromsø in Norway, Club Meaux and Red Star 93 in France, and Club Africain in Tunisia. Essediri experienced a tough start at Tromsø, and was given partial blame for the club's 2001 relegation. The following year he was lent out to another Norwegian club Bodø/Glimt. When he returned to Tromsø, he was not considered first-team material.
The company experienced many vehicle losses during this time, especially at Dover where the garage suffered a direct hit in 1942, killing several staff. Lots of the vehicles had been lent out or contracted away, some stationed in the Midlands; and this, coupled with those written off by enemy action, led to severe shortages. This was alleviated, somewhat, with the delivery of 10 Guy Arabs with utility Park Royal bodywork.
According to their archives, Dordrecht gave a similar stained glass window for which this same cartoon design was lent out for the church in Edam in 1606, which Cuyp did not execute himself. That window also survives today. In addition to these windows, he also received payments in 1605 for the church in Woudrichem (for ƒ 180) and in 1618 for the "new church of Niervaart" in Klundert (for ƒ 100).
The balance at the end of the billing cycle is multiplied by a factor in order to give the interest charge. This can result in an actual interest rate lower or higher than the expected one, since it does not take into account the average daily balance, that is, the time value of money actually lent by the bank. It does, however, take into account money that is left lent out over several months.
A lending library is a library from which books and other media are lent out. The earliest reference to or use of the term "lending library" yet located in English correspondence dates from ca. 1586; C'Tess Pembroke Ps. CXII. v, "He is ... Most liberall and lending," referring to the books of an unknown type of library, and later in a context familiar to users of contemporary English, in 1708, by J. Chamberlayne; St. Gt. Brit.
The remaining elevators were to be added once ridership at the station justified it. These elevators rise to the surface on a plot given to the city by the Henry Morgenthau Company. The elevators were lent out to one of the company's buildings, which was completed at the end of 1916. The Henry Morgenthau Company was involved in real estate development and had profited from the increasing value land around the station.
A box of costumes was bought and lent out to branches along with copies of the script. Probably modelled on the suffragette "Pageant of Great Women", it featured popular heroines including Florence Nightingale, Queen Victoria, Boadicea and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. BWTA women often wore white ribbons as a symbol of the Temperance cause, and thus their organ was named the White Ribbon. In 2004, the organisation was re-named the White Ribbon Association.
Map of Asia minor, 89 BC showing Roman provinces and client states (red), as well as Pontic territory (dark green). Before the First Mithridatic War, during Flaccus's governorship of Asia, collections were made for games and a festival and games in his honour. The money was deposited at Tralles, but seems not to have been spent as planned. Cicero claims the town lent out the funds at interest for its own profit.
Detail from the qualification games from the 1970s When the club was established, it was decided that players would wear a green uniform with a white collar, white shorts and green socks. Soccer shoes were made by village shoemakers. The genuine club sportswear went missing during the year of 1946. This occurred when the club lent out team apparel to a neighbouring football club, after which it was never returned, or lost.
The museum is still famous for group portraits by Hals, but since the group portraits from the military guilds were cleaned in the early 20th century, it is these which most visitors come to see today. Most of the objects and paintings can not be displayed for lack of space, and the museum rotates its collection through exhibitions at various locations in Haarlem, though works by some prominent painters cannot be lent out and remain in storage.
The library offers museum passes to several local and regional museums. The museum passes are only available to Massachusetts residents as they are provided through funding by the Friends of Braille and Talking Book Library and not through federal funds. The library advocates for braille literacy in part through its Braille Awareness Kits. These are kits of information including braille alphabet cards and braille books and are lent out to help spread the knowledge of braille.
Most libraries usually have a very well written, legally tight, acquisitions policy which rejects beforehand any object which is not some kind of print or text-based document. There are some exceptions. Children's libraries sometimes have a toy collection, whose individual items are lent out after being cataloged as realia, or under a more specific material designation such as toy, or game. Some large libraries have a special mandate to keep objects related to a literary collection.
She was first lent out to English studios and then to Italian studios for a series of low-budget films, many of them obscure, and some considered lost. In 1959, Fox cast her in two independent gangster films shot in the United Kingdom: The Challenge and Too Hot to Handle. Both films were low-budget, and their American releases were delayed. Too Hot to Handle was not released in the United States until 1961 as Playgirl After Dark.
He taught at Rutgers University in New Jersey from 1929 to 1937, when he became Chief Assistant at the Royal Greenwich Observatory. During World War II, Atkinson was called away from this position to do anti-magnetic mine work. In 1944, he was lent out to the Ballistic Research Laboratory at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland, where he worked under famed astronomer Edwin Hubble. Atkinson stayed there for two years then returned to Royal Greenwich Observatory.
However, many associations survived the famine, and the loan fund structure remained essentially unchanged. By 1851 there were 123 surviving funds, 40% of the earlier peak, and the average total lent out had more than halved. However, the surviving funds recovered fairly quickly, although the industry never reached the same asset levels as before the famine, and then declined gradually over the long term. From the 1860s the funds had to compete with post office savings banks.
Bette Davis enjoyed working with Spencer Tracy, and had actually idolized him. The two wanted to do another movie together but never had the opportunity to do so, although they did appear together again on a radio version of Dark Victory in 1940. Tracy, then under contract to Fox, was lent out to Warner Brothers for the film. It was originally intended for James Cagney, but at the time Cagney was having one of his many misunderstandings with Jack L. Warner.
The library building in Ürgüp was open only on Mondays and Fridays; on other workdays Güzelgöz was out circulating with his traveling library. He continued with his traveling library on donkey although he was mocked, and nicknamed "Mustafa the Librarian with Donkey". Books were lent out for two weeks, and were returned for another book at Güzelgöz' next visit to the same village. He ran his traveling library with three donkeys, three mules, and two horses, and serviced a total of 36 villages.
Book production was completed slowly by hand and took place mainly in large monastic libraries. Books were so in demand during Charlemagne's time that these libraries lent out some books, but only if that borrower offered valuable collateral in return. The privileges of Charlemagne at the Modena Cathedral (containing the monogram of Charlemagne), dated 782 Most of the surviving works of classical Latin were copied and preserved by Carolingian scholars. Indeed, the earliest manuscripts available for many ancient texts are Carolingian.
The BBC Archives encompass numerous different archives containing different materials produced or acquired by the BBC. The earliest material dates back to 1890 and now consists of 1 million hours of playable material, in addition to documents, photographs and equipment. The archives contain 15 million items on 60 miles of shelving spread over several sites. The stock is managed using a bar code system, which help to locate material on the shelves and also track material that has been lent out.
Presently museum/ interpretation center is use as an auditorium to screen informative films and slides on wildlife, forests and nature. At present there are 8 films are lent out occasionally to other institutions like schools, colleges and other forest divisions. At present only one 16 mm film projector, one 35 mm slide projector, one overhead projector as well as two tape recorders are available with the sanctuary. As there is no electricity within the sanctuary, the generator is used to operate these facilities.
The sound was recorded live by a single microphone in the centre of the room, and Lennon suggested that Hanton put a scarf over the snare drum to lower the volume. They first recorded a McCartney original (credited as McCartney/Harrison) followed by Buddy Holly's "That'll Be the Day". Both feature Lennon on lead vocals. When the recording was finished, Phillips handed the group a fragile 78rpm record, which was passed around the band for one week each, or lent out to friends.
When money is deposited in a bank, it can then be lent out to another person. If the initial deposit was $100 and the bank lends out $100 to another customer the money supply has increased by $100. However, because the depositor can ask for the money back, banks have to maintain minimum reserves to service customer needs. If the reserve requirement is 10% then, in the earlier example, the bank can lend $90 and thus the money supply increases by only $90.
The museum of modern arts has become inspired by other museums to use modern technology to guide its visitors through the museum. It plans to develop a wireless application that runs on museum owned pda's that are lent out to visitors at the entrance. The application uses gps to determine the position of the visitor and streaming video and audio to take on the role as museum guide. The museum board has demanded the creation of a solid business model.
The library was open to the general public and anybody could use its resources. Books could be borrowed with an ID card (a library card) and were lent out free of charge. Library cards for children were embellished with an illustration by Beta Vukanović and were inscribed with an excerpt from the 1924 Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child. The 1941 German Bombing of Belgrade caused untold damage to the library, reducing the building to rubble and destroying invaluable cultural heritage.
More people bought houses with this larger amount of money, thus increasing the prices of these houses. Lenders looked at their balance sheets which not only showed that they had made more loans, but that the collaterals backing the loans – the value of the houses – had gone up (because more money was chasing the same amount of housing, relatively). Thus they lent out more money because their balance sheets looked good, and prices rose higher still. This was further amplified by public policy.
At Fox, he appeared in several films: In Love and War with Jeffrey Hunter and Robert Wagner; A Private's Affair with Ernie Kovacs; and was lent out to Warner Bros. for the role of "Jenkins" in the Michael Garrison production of The Dark at the Top of the Stairs with Robert Preston and Dorothy McGuire. He also played Lt Tim, Steve McQueen's assistant in The Towering Inferno.Imdb.com: Paul Comi In 1960, Comi appeared in The Twilight Zone episode "People Are Alike All Over", as Warren Marcusson.
Main Reading Room of the New York City Public Library on 5th Avenue ca, 1910–1920 A reference library does not lend books and other items; instead, they can only be read at the library itself. Typically, such libraries are used for research purposes, for example at a university. Some items at reference libraries may be historical and even unique. Many lending libraries contain a "reference section", which holds books, such as dictionaries, which are common reference books, and are therefore not lent out.
East Indian ladies of Chimbai village performing at Bandra Gymkhana Traditional dress for women is the lugra. For men, traditional wear consists of khaki shorts and a white banian. A Koli Christian bridegroom usually wears an older Portuguese admiral's uniform, which is preserved and lent out for such occasions. East Indian women wore a blouse and cotton lugra, with the back pleats tucked into the waist; women did not use the upper portion of the sari (covering the head and breast) until they were married.
The reading department contains the principal newspapers > and periodicals of the city, and many from different parts of the country, > and is in a most flourishing condition. A cabinet of minerals and > curiosities has been commenced; an annual course of free lectures is > supported by the institution; an elocution class has been formed, the > exercises of which consist in the reading of original compositions, > declamation, and debate. ... The library is open three hours every Tuesday > and Saturday evening. About 10,000 volumes are lent out annually.
Lamothe & Humphreys, The Sixth Family, p.308 According to law enforcement officials, Rizzuto oversaw a criminal empire that imported and distributed tons of heroin, cocaine and hashish in Canada, laundered hundreds of millions of dollars, lent out millions more through loansharking operations and profited handsomely from illegal gambling, fraud and contract killings. In 1972, Rizzuto was sentenced to two years for conspiring to commit arson of Renda's hair salon in Boucherville in 1968 with the intention of defrauding insurers; he served 18 months of the sentence.
In 1858, Dow won a special election to the Maine House of Representatives as a Republican when one of the members elected declined to serve. He won reelection to a full term in 1859, and continued to agitate for stricter prohibition laws, but was unsuccessful. He also became entangled in scandal when the State Treasurer, Benjamin D. Peck, lent out state funds to private citizens (including Dow) contravening state law. Peck lent large sums to himself, which were lost when his business ventures failed.
The trucks suffered from stress cracks in the cast frames; the engines frequently developed low oil pressure; the cooling water leaked, and the dynamic brake grids were prone to melting down. A business downturn in 1976 proved the end of the U50C in service; all were withdrawn, although many were stored in serviceable condition. No return to service occurred, though five were lent out as stationary power generators during a coal miners' strike in early 1978. All were sold for scrap during 1977-1978.
20th Century Fox lent out Johnson to make the comedy Mother Is a Freshman (1948) with Loretta Young. Back at MGM, he was given a role in the film noir Scene of the Crime (1949). In 1949, he starred with Judy Garland in In the Good Old Summertime, which also marked the first film appearance of Liza Minnelli as Garland's and Johnson's young daughter. He next worked in Battleground (1949), a movie about the Battle of the Bulge produced by MGM's new studio head Dore Schary.
List of Thomas Markaunt's books, with their prices. Corpus Christi College, MS 232 Thomas Markaunt (–1439) was a Fellow and benefactor of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge University. He is best known for his sizeable bequest of seventy-five books to Corpus Christi library, which were lent out to the student body in a formal academic system of electio. However he is also of note for his extensive compilation of early University records, known as "Markaunt's book", which gained him a (sometimes disputed) historical reputation as an antiquarian.
While some historians have argued against the Enlightenment's penetration into the lower classes, the Bibliothèque Bleue represents at least a desire to participate in Enlightenment sociability.Outram, 27–29 Moving up the classes, a variety of institutions offered readers access to material without needing to buy anything. Libraries that lent out their material for a small price started to appear and occasionally bookstores would offer a small lending library to their patrons. Coffee houses commonly offered books, journals and sometimes even popular novels to their customers.
It is believed that the Qormi statue of Baby Jesus was modelled by Fr. Francis Micallef who had lent out the one for the first Ħamrun procession of 1921. Many members of the society used their skills to make this event even more attractive and devotional. The Qormi superior, Antonio Cassar, a tinsmith, hammered out a beautiful halo, two flower vases complete with metal flowers and leaves mounted on a portable platform. Other professional carpenters made beautiful inlaid mangers and platforms for the procession.
Libraries were introduced in 1898 and were positioned at the rear of the first floor of stores so that customers had to walk through other departments to reach them, in an attempt to boost sales. Florence purchased the first library stock herself, buying job lots of second hand books. The libraries were rolled out to around half of the company's stores and reached their height in 1938 when 35 million books a year were lent out. Florence was greatly concerned with ensuring the welfare of the company's employees, particularly female workers.
Regulation Z details four principal methods of calculating interest. For purposes of comparison between rates, the "expected rate" is the APR applied to the average daily balance for a year, or in other words, the interest charged on the actual balance left lent out by the bank at the close of each business day. That said, there are not just four prescribed ways to charge interest i.e., those specified in Regulation Z. U.S. issuers can charge interest according to any reasonable method to which the card holder agrees.
As a result of its popularity, the painting was lent out for display at Rectory Field, Blackheath and Lord's Cricket Ground. The painting is viewed by cricket fans and historians as a notable illustration of the Golden Age of cricket in the Victorian and Edwardian periods before the First World War. Cricket historian E. W. Swanton praised the painting, singling it out as "one of the finest ever portrayals of distinguished identifiable cricketers in action". The painting was predominantly displayed in the pavilion of the St. Lawrence Ground.
As a result of Braja Sundar's transfer to Comilla for official work there was slackening in the activities of the Brahmo Samaj. On witnessing this, he bought a house in Armeniatola and lent out a part of it for the activities of the Samaj. At around the same time, as a result of his interest and the efforts of Dinanath Sen, a school for moral and religious instruction of the young was opened under Dhaka Brahmo Samaj. Aghore Nath Gupta and Vijay Krishna Goswami were sent as teachers to that school.
Restated, increases in central bank money may not result in commercial bank money because the money is not required to be lent out – it may instead result in a growth of unlent reserves (excess reserves). If banks maintain low levels of excess reserves, as they did in the US from 1959 to August 2008, then central banks can finely control broad (commercial bank) money supply by controlling central bank money creation, as the multiplier gives a direct and fixed connection between these.Stefan Homburg (2017) A Study in Monetary Macroeconomics, Oxford University Press, , pp. 141 ff.
Indirectly, they also measure a country's amount of central bank money created and lent out beyond what is needed for domestic circulation. Since every country needs a relatively steady amount of central bank money for its domestic transactions, payment orders to other countries, which reduce the domestic stock of money, must be offset by a continuous issuing of new refinancing credit, i.e., the creation of new central bank money. Similarly, the increase in money balances in the country whose central bank honours the payment orders reduces the demand for fresh refinancing credit.
She terminated her contract with Rank, where she had been unhappy with the film roles she'd received, and with being "lent out" to other studios. She was finding gainful employment in television and radio, and looking to flex her singing talent, something Balcon and Rank had overlooked. Caprice was followed by Bet Your Life with Julie Wilson, Arthur Askey and Brian Reece, with whom Howes was also simultaneously on radio. In 1953, she starred in the West End in the musical Paint Your Wagon with her father, Bobby Howes, which ran for 18 months.
Gonçalves started his youth football with Concordia Basel. In 2009 he transferred to Basel and played in their U-16 and U-18 team and a year and a half in their U-21 team before he signed a three-year professional contract and joined their first team. Gonçalves played his first team debut in the Swiss Cup 0–4 away win on 23 August 2014 against CS Italien. In January 2015 it was announced that Gonçalves would be lent out to Wil to gain first team playing experience.
In 1981, Tom met Margo Montgomery, the niece of the woman he was dating, Maggie Crawford. After her disastrous affair with James Stenbeck, and the stunning revelation that John Dixon was her father, Margo decided to reinvent herself and began working as her Aunt Maggie's assistant at Lowell, Hughes, and Colman. Margo had been lent out by Maggie to help Tom, who was investigating a drug ring in Oakdale—and Margo developed feelings for the man. However, Tom got annoyed at Margo when she interfered too much in his investigation of Bernard Ignatius Grayson, a.k.a.
Before its purchase by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art, The Swimming Hole appears to have undergone seven different conservatory treatments. It may have been restored prior to its inclusion in Eakins' memorial exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1917. A photograph from that time reveals cracks in the glazes and a drip mark, possibly caused by the splash of a caustic liquid. After the painting was acquired by the Fort Worth Art Association, it was often lent out for exhibitions and was damaged as a result.
On July 10, he managed to get Mercedes to come to his room at the Whitehall Motel with an offer of money. A neighbor, Roy Charles Menon, witnessed part of the interaction between Mercedes and McAlphin that night when he stopped by to ask for the return of some cassette tapes he had lent out. Mercedes had indicated to Menon that he should talk to McAlphin and attempted to leave, going out into the parking lot before McAlphin stopped her and hit her. Yelling "get back in the room, bitch," he dragged her back into the room as Menon left.
Eventually Disneys lent out their effects wizard Joshua Meador to spruce up MGM's 1956 Forbidden Planet. William Hanna and Joe Barbera supervised animation for the scene. Tom and Jerry's second feature film appearance was swimming with Esther Williams in a dream sequence in another MGM musical, Dangerous When Wet (1953). On October 1, 1992, the first international release of Tom and Jerry: The Movie arrived when the film was released overseas to theaters in Europe and then domestically by Miramax Films on July 30, 1993, with future video and DVD releases that would be sold under Warner Bros.
Many of the original documents were already in poor condition at the time of their transcription and of those that were lent out to itinerant officers for the collection of the aid in 1303, many were never returned. Thus the book rather than originals eventually became of necessity a first reference for the Exchequer, a development which itself contributed to the neglect of the originals. Indeed, by 1383 the name Testa de Nevill had come to be used colloquially for the two volumes, while the archive formerly known by that name is no longer mentioned in the sources.Maxwell-Lyte, "Preface", xiii.
Thousands of silver tales annually were gained through trade by Chen Yonghua. Koxinga also employed official merchants who worked for him like Zheng Tai, an adopted son of his family. Travel distance and vessel size were factors in the price of Koxinga's permits which he sold to people who wanted to engage in overseas commerce like when Zheng Zhilong ruled. Private loans ere given out by the Xiamen Warehouse for Benefiting the People. The 5 Sea Firms lent out ships for rent and Zheng agents also provided cargo space on their ships for a fee to private merchants.
He later spent time in the ECHL before moving to Europe in 2001, where he began his European career in Italy for the team Fassa Falcons. MacNevin has also played one season in ERC Ingolstadt of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL) and two seasons in Växjö Lakers Hockey of the HockeyAllsvenskan. He signed to a one-year contract with AIK in 2010, which will expire after the 2010–11 Elitserien season. He was, however, lent out by AIK to HPK of the Finnish SM-liiga for a few games during the beginning of the season, for taxation reasons.
A friend of the Lake Poets, with whom he considered himself a kindred spirit, Beaumont lent out the farm of the estate to William Wordsworth and his family in the winter of 1806. They were briefly joined there by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, but Beaumont was unable to establish the same rapport with this poet as with Wordsworth, who proved a lifelong friend. The 1800s saw Beaumont being promoted to influential posts in what were effectively committees of artistic taste: he sat on the monuments committee for St Paul's Cathedral from 1802 and was one of the founding directors of the British Institution (established in 1805).
The medal was inscribed: "I am Help, the railway dog of England, and travelling agent for the orphans of railwaymen who are killed on duty. My office is at 306, City Road [later 55, Colebrooke Row], London, where subscriptions will be thankfully received and duly acknowledged". While Help often travelled with Climpson, he was also lent out to other guards to undertake collections on their routes. By the time of his death, it was claimed that he had travelled every railway line in Britain and visited all the major towns, and had also travelled twice to France, in the course of his travels raising more than £1,000.
On 1 July 1942, he was promoted to Major. On 22 July 1942, the Geschwaderkommodore of Jagdgeschwader 52 (JG 52—52nd Fighter Wing), Major Herbert Ihlefeld, was severely injured in a flight accident and had to surrender command during his convalescence. At the time, all three Gruppen of JG 77 were lent out to other units, and Gollob had time to spare, so temporarily took over command of JG 52 as acting Geschwaderkommodore. On this or one of the following days, he departed and flew to the Geschwaderstab of JG 52\. On 28 June 1942, the Wehrmacht had initiated Fall Blau (Case Blue), the 1942 strategic summer offensive in southern Russia.
Since 2002 the organization has been led by Justine Zinkin. Neighborhood Trust FCU has grown to a membership of nearly 5,000, and has cumulatively lent out more that $15 million in small loans, helping local residents purchase home computers, pay for education, pay off loan sharks (known locally as prestamistas), start small businesses, etc. Today Neighborhood Trust's financial education and counseling programs are in over 30 community organizations throughout New York City, reaching nearly 6,000 individuals annually. In 2012, Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners broadened its mission, seeking partnerships nationally with employers looking to help low-income staff through financial literacy, credit, and wealth-building opportunities.
Books are lent out at the lending library, which also houses the online public access catalog (OPAC) for information search. The reference library includes reserve counters, overnight loans, photo-copying services, reference services, inter-library loans, journals, reference books, and a special multi-media facility for accessing compact disks (CDs) on computers. Students also have access to a paperback library and a non-print media library where audio cassettes, television, and video cassette recorder (VCR) facilities are available for group and individual use. "The Woods" leisure space The campus also has a leisure space known as "The Woods" which includes a couple of large trees.
On 1 July 1965, the library moved to a larger premises of by Brunnsparken park, when the previous restaurant moved to the newly built Terraza building. At the end of the 1960s the library lent out 60,000 books per year and was open 28 hours per week. In 1971 a national municipal reform occurred and Ljungby municipality's population increased to 26,000 inhabitants; but the library was just suited for a population of half that size, despite that the building had been expanded by . The Cultural Committee of Ljungby – which had replaced the library board – concluded that there was too little staff, too few books, and too small rooms.
In 1632 or 1633 he became rector of Baldwin- Brightwell, Oxfordshire, and about that time was also made chaplain to Charles I of England, and canon-residentiary of Chichester, holding the prebend of Seaford. After the outbreak of the First English Civil War the House of Lords resolved (5 October 1642) that he should be allowed to attend the king as chaplain in ordinary. When the war ended he lost his prebend of Chichester as a delinquent, but he was discharged by the committee for sequestrations; under the Commonwealth he lent out money. After the Restoration he again became royal chaplain, and recovered his Seaford prebend and his Oxford livings.
Pakistan joined IMF in 1950 as newly established country was facing fiscal problems since its creation in 1947 from British India. In 1958, for the first time, Pakistan went to IMF for bailout. For this, IMF lent out to Pakistan on standby arrangement basis on 8 December 1958. Pakistan again went to IMF in 1965. This time, IMF gave to war-torn nation on 16 March 1965. Three years later, Pakistan again went to IMF for third time for balance of payment problems for which IMF gave on 17 October 1968. In 1971, Pakistan lost its Eastern half, East Pakistan, in a war against India. This war caused huge loses to Pakistan.
The mansion became a museum in 1930. The museum, which includes restored rooms, local history exhibits, and exhibits on Earl W. Oglebay and his former estate, is operated by the Oglebay Institute and is open to the public for tours and programs throughout the year The mansion before Earl W. Oglebay made major renovations to the original farmhouse. Earl W. Oglebay's hope was to develop Waddington Farm as a model farm, a laboratory for new agricultural changes that could be used to end the great starvation in the United States. He lent out parts of the farm to various researchers so that they could learn about crop rotation, soil improvement, and cost-cutting methods.
Where shares have been shorted and the company that issues the shares distributes a dividend, the question arises as to who receives the dividend. The new buyer of the shares, who is the holder of record and holds the shares outright, receives the dividend from the company. However, the lender, who may hold its shares in a margin account with a prime broker and is unlikely to be aware that these particular shares are being lent out for shorting, also expects to receive a dividend. The short seller therefore pays the lender an amount equal to the dividend to compensate—though technically, as this payment does not come from the company, it is not a dividend.
Ron Radford was appointed director in late 2004. He was formerly director of the Art Gallery of South Australia. Radford has lent out the Gallery's old masters collection (European art, prior to the 19th century) for long-term display to state galleries, noting that he "considers the collection of less than 30 paintings, put together by Mollison to give context to the modern collection, as too small to make any impact on the public". He has been quoted as saying that the gallery should concentrate on its strengths – European art of the first half of the 20th century, 20th- century American art, photography, Asian art and the 20th-century drawing collection, and to fill the gaps in the Australian collection.
Between 1439 and 1447, it was once again built anew, this time by Bishop Rudolf of Utrecht. Lage was at this time an episcopal seat occupied by a steward, and now and then it was lent out as a pledge. In 1523 the castle came under fire by Guelders troops, to whom the castle was given up. In 1592, there was yet more building, and there arose a fortlike castle with a house chapel, built by the liege lord Dietrich von Ketteler to whom the castle had been pledged in 1576 and enfeoffed in 1590, whereafter Lage, along with the Bishopric of Utrecht, was transferred to Emperor Charles V, and then from him to his son Philip II of Spain in 1555.
Besides the circulating collection, Nablus Library also houses several significant archival collections, including the so-called Prisoner's Section, an archive of materials made and used by Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails between 1975 and 1995, as well as the personal collection of Qadri Tuqan, a Nablusi educator and one of the founders of An-Najah College, now An- Najah National University. Other collections include Palestinian newspapers dating back to the 1920s, as well as a collection of sharia court documents from northern Palestine spanning the length of the Mandate Period. Nablus Library also houses doctoral theses donated by students from An-Najah National University. In 2000, Nablus Library claimed to have approximately 500 visitors per day and 300 books lent out per day.
W. Dennis Chesley and Mary B. Mcallister, "Pioneers in New Hampshire Archaeology: Wentworth Cheswell Esquire", The New Hampshire Archaeologist, Vol. 22 (1), 1981 In 1801, Cheswill and other men established the first library in Newmarket, the Newmarket Social Library. Of the estates of men who started the library, Cheswill's was valued the highest at over $13,000. In his will he stated, > I also order and direct that my Library and collection of Manuscripts be > kept safe and together…if any should desire the use of any of the books and > give caution to return the same again in reasonable time, they may be lent > out to them, provided that only one book be out of said Library in the hands > of any one at the same time.
The museum is home to one of the world's largest collections of Chinese antique furniture, made of the treasured materials huanghuali and zitan, from the Ming and Qing dynasties. The Liang Yi Museum also houses the world's premier collection of bejewelled clutches, compacts and powder boxes. Made in design houses such as Cartier, Boucheron and Van Cleef & Arpels, these nécessaires and minaudières, glittering with precious stones and showing detailed craftsmanship, were once a staple of every lady's evening wear. With over 800 examples from the late 1880s through to the 1960s, this collection provides a peek at a bygone era and has been lent out to other museums in the past, including the Palace Museum in Beijing and Goldsmiths Hall in London.
They All Kissed the Bride was originally slated to star Carole Lombard in a follow-up film to the successful To Be or Not to Be. However, she died in a 1942 plane crash after departing Las Vegas on her way back from a bond-selling tour in. Louis B. Mayer at MGM agreed to let Crawford place on loan to Columbia, where producer Edward Kaufman had to rework the script to fit Crawford's style of comedy. In fact, Mayer rarely lent out stars of Crawford's stature, not wanting other studios to profit from MGM's star-making machine. Crawford insisted that Melvyn Douglas (with whom she had appeared in 1938's The Shining Hour and 1941's A Woman's Face) star opposite her.
Born in the mid-15th-century in Prague, Czech Republic. His father Moses Jaffe of Bologna was a Polish rabbi and paternal descendant of Elhanan Jaffe of Dampierre. His mother Margolioth bat Samuel HaLevi was considered to be an extremely learned woman, to the point that some of her descendants adopted the second surname Margolioth, such as Abraham's brother Jacob Margolioth-Jaffe of Nuremberg. Early in his carrier, Abraham amassed a great fortune, which he later lent out to King Vladislaus II of Bohemia and Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I. Around 1495, he emigrated Kazimierz, Krakow, Poland, before where he soon became a banker to Alexander Jagiellon and later King Sigismund I of Poland, who he developed a close relationship with.
Ellis Waterhouse called it "one of the wholly original masterpieces of British art".Waterhouse, 1978, 286. From Bates, the picture passed to Walter Tyrell; another member of the Tyrell family, Edward, presented it to the National Gallery, London, in 1863, after it had failed to sell at an auction at Christie's in 1854. The painting was transferred to the Tate Gallery in 1929, although it was actually on loan to Derby Museum and Art Gallery between 1912 and 1947. It has been lent out for exhibitions to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. in 1976, the National Museum of Fine Arts in Stockholm in 1979–1980, and Paris (Grand Palais), New York (Metropolitan) and the Tate in London in 1990.
"Bermuda black hole" was used in relation to US corporate tax strategies that routed un-taxed profits to Bermuda, where they did not emerge again for fear of being subject to US corporation tax. Instead, the untaxed profits were "lent out" to the corporate parent, or its subsidiaries, thus avoiding the risk of incurring US taxation. The Bermuda black hole led to US corporations amassing over US$1 trillion in offshore locations from 2004 to 2017 (before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017). A "Bermuda black hole" became the most favoured common final destination for the Double Irish with a Dutch Sandwich base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) corporate tax avoidance strategy as used by US multinational technology firms in Ireland; and particularly Apple and Google.
On 15 August 1978, the DoC (whose technical side is now part of the Industry Canada) held a press conference and formally announced the Telidon project to the public, demonstrating a large video display sending information to the minicomputer controlling it over an acoustic coupler modem. They outlined a four-year development plan that included funding for further technical development at the CRC, the production of several hundred terminals that would be lent out to industry for development studies, as well as funds for marketing and lobbying in videotex standards negotiations. In 1979 the DoC formed the Canadian Videotex Consultative Committee to advise the Minister on ways to commercialize the CRC's work, and develop videotext services within Canada. The committee held four meetings during the initial four-year development plan, and coordinated a number of field trials with broadcasters, telephone companies, cable television firms, manufacturers and various information providers.
The insider laws of the piaohao were based on Confucian traditions and the laws themselves can be described as "a game of ritual formalism". Because the descendants of merchants (a class which includes bankers) were not allowed to take any civil service examinations for 3 generations the majority of the Chinese magistrates came from other classes of the four occupations, mostly from the land owning classes. Because the merchant class couldn't rely on the magistrates for fair justice they had to create their own system of enforcing contracts, this system included a general manager chosen by the shareholders, these general managers usually had a team of vice presidents that were tasked to supervise the clerks and other bank employees. During their early years, the piaohao would pay depositors interests of 0.2% to 0.3% per month and lent out money at an interest rate of 0.6% to 0.7% per month.
Before the 1515 partition, Bärweiler – along with Kirn, Sulzbach, Desloch, Niederhundsbach and Oberhundsbach – belonged to the Waldgravial Amt of Kyrburg. In the 16th century, the tithe was due the Waldgraves and Rhinegraves. In the way that was typical for this family, the Waldgravine and Rhinegravine Anna von Kyrburg, according to a 1542 sworn statement by the gatherers of the Türkensteuer (“Turk tax”, imposed in the Holy Roman Empire ostensibly to help the Emperor ward off the “Turkish threat”), had lent out church holdings and assumed the lease herself. She also held the right to appoint the parish priest. Presumably, the clergyman posted to the designated chapel was paid (1507). In 1515, there was a division of Waldgravial-Rhinegravial holdings between Waldgraves and Rhinegraves Philipp (von Dhaun) and Johann VII (von Kyrburg), both Waldgrave and Rhinegrave Johann VI’s sons, who in 1499 had succeeded their father as his rightful successors.
She received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress for Crossfire (1947). Grahame starred with Humphrey Bogart in the film In a Lonely Place (1950) for Columbia Pictures, a performance for which she gained praise. Though today it is considered among her finest performances, it was not a box-office hit, and Howard Hughes, owner of RKO, admitted that he never saw it. When she asked to be lent out for roles in Born Yesterday (also 1950) and A Place in the Sun (1951), Hughes refused and instead made her perform a supporting role in Macao (1952). in her Academy Award-winning role in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952) Despite only appearing for a little over nine minutes on screen, she won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in MGM's The Bad and the Beautiful (also 1952); she long held the record for the shortest performance on screen to win an acting Oscar until Beatrice Straight won for Network with a five-minute performance.
The Agricultural Marketing Act of 1929, under the administration of Herbert Hoover, established the Federal Farm Board from the Federal Farm Loan Board established by the Federal Farm Loan Act of 1916 with a revolving fund of half a billion dollars.Chapter 4: Crisis and Activism: 1929-1940, United States Government Printing Office The original act was sponsored by Hoover in an attempt to stop the downward spiral of crop prices by seeking to buy, sell and store agricultural surpluses or by generously lending money to farm organizations. Money was lent out to the farmers in order to buy seed and food for the livestock, which was especially important since there had previously been a drought in the Democratic South. However, Hoover refused to lend to the farmers themselves, as he thought that it would be unconstitutional to do so and if they were lent money, they would become dependent on government money.
The Societies' Borrowing Powers Act 1898 (61 & 62 Vict. c.15), long title An Act to empower certain Societies to borrow Money from Persons and Corporations other than Members, was an Act of Parliament of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, given the Royal Assent on 25 July 1898 and repealed in 1974. The Act provided that a society was permitted to institute a rule allowing it to take deposits and borrow money (at interest) from its members and from any other persons; as soon as such a rule was registered it was permitted to do so. The Act stipulated that the society had to be registered under the Friendly Societies Act 1896, and have as its object the creation of funds to be lent out for the benefit of the members of the society (or to members of the society), with rules in place to prevent the division of the funds among its members by dividends, profits or the like, and to ensure that all loans were to be applied for purposes of which the society approved.
Thus they qualified for the Europa League knockout phase where they advanced as far as the quarter-finals. The season 2014–15 was also a successful one for Basel, but for Aliji it was a difficult one under the new trainer Paulo Sousa. Despite the fact that Basel won the championship later that season for the sixth time in a row and despite the fact that Basel had entered the Champions League in the group stage reaching the knockout phase on 9 December 2014 as they managed a 1–1 draw at Anfield against Liverpool, Aliji totaled just 17 appearances during the first half of the season, 5 (of 18) League, 3 (of 3) in the Cup and just 1 (of 6) in the Champions League, as well 8 further appearances in test games, mostly as substitute. Because Sousa did not rely upon Aliji and he could not make the starting eleven, on 17 January 2015 it was announced that Aliji would be lent out to Vaduz to gain first team playing experience.
Many banks offer very low interest, often 0%, for a certain number of statement cycles on certain sub-balances ranging from the entire balance to purchases or balance transfers (used to pay off other accounts), or only for buying certain merchandise in stores owned or contracted with by the lender. Such "zero interest" credit cards allow participating retailers to generate more sales by encouraging consumers to make more purchases on credit. Additionally, the bank gets a chance to increase income by having more money lent out, and possibly an extra marketing transaction payment, either from the payee or sales side of the business, for contributing to the sale (in some cases as much as the entire interest payment, charged to the payee instead of the cardholder). These offers are often complex, requiring the cardholder to work to understand the terms of the offer, and possibly to pay off the sub-balance by a certain date or have interest charged retro-actively, or to pay a certain amount per month over the minimum due (an "interest free" minimum payment) in order to pay down the sub- balance.
Poet Laureate Rita Dove's definition of a library at entrance to the Maine State Library in Augusta, Maine, United States Many institutions make a distinction between a circulating or lending library, where materials are expected and intended to be loaned to patrons, institutions, or other libraries, and a reference library where material is not lent out. Travelling libraries, such as the early horseback libraries of eastern Kentucky and bookmobiles, are generally of the lending type. Modern libraries are often a mixture of both, containing a general collection for circulation, and a reference collection which is restricted to the library premises. Also, increasingly, digital collections enable broader access to material that may not circulate in print, and enables libraries to expand their collections even without building a larger facility. Lamba (2019) reinforced this idea by observing that “today’s libraries have become increasingly multi-disciplinary, collaborative and networked” and that applying Web 2.0 tools to libraries would “not only connect the users with their community and enhance communication but will also help the librarians to promote their library’s activities, services, and products to target both their actual and potential users”.
Jan van den Eynde made his will in 1671, and died in Naples in 1674, the same year his son Ferdinand passed away. Ferdinand, Marquess of Castelnuovo, was Jan van den Eynde's designated heir. However, in 1671 Van den Eynde ordered several legati. He left an yearly 10 000 ducats' revenue off some of his landed estate to his infant grandson, Don Giovanni Mastrillo-van den Eynde, 3rd Marquess of Gallo (later 5th Duke of Marigliano) the son of his daughter Catherine van den Eynde, provided that his grandson add Van den Eynde to his surname (item lascio jure legati a D. Giovanni Mastrillo Marchese del Gallo mio carissimo nipote docati 10 mila di capitale con sue annue entrate, cioè docati 5000 sopra la gabella del carlino a staro d'oglio, che da me si possiede, e gli altri docati 5000 sopra la grana 25 ad oncia con li loro frutti, con condizione, che appresso il suo Cognome si debba mettere il mio di Vandeneynden) and the right to 10 000 ducats' worth of income off his land is never sold, lent out, or pledged.
As soon as Kong finished the script of The Peach Blossom Fan, it was lent out and spread quickly among scholars and aristocrats. In the autumn of the year Jimao, even the emperor sent servant to Kong's house, asking in haste for the complete script.《桃花扇本末》:"《桃花扇》本成,王公荐绅,莫不借钞,时有纸贵之誉。己卯秋夕,内侍索《桃花扇》本甚急,予之缮本,莫知流传何所。乃于张平州中丞家觅得一本,午夜进之直邸,遂入内府。己卯除夜,李木庵总宪,遣使送岁金,即索《桃花扇》为围炉下酒之物。开岁灯节,已买优扮演矣。其班名‘金斗’,出之李相国湘北先生宅,名噪时流。" In the next year, General Li Muan set up a therical troupe called Jin Dou to perform the play, which gained huge fame immediately. Each time the troupe performed, the actors and actresses were given considerable tips.《脞语》:"孔东塘尚任,随孙司空在丰勘里下河浚河工程,住先映碧枣园中,时谱《桃花扇》传奇未毕,更阑按拍,歌声呜呜。每一出成,辄邀映碧共赏。映碧之子木庵,官总宪,以授“金斗班”演之,名噪都下。每王公借演此班,伶人得缠头费甚钜。" The play was a particular favorite of the Kangxi Emperor.

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