Borrowed
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House Report 116-120, accompanying a bill for the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 included a provision for GAO to assess the levels and impacts of borrowed military personnel. This report examines DOD's and the military services' policies on the use of borrowed military personnel, the tracking and reporting of their use of borrowed military personnel, and any impacts of that use on readiness.
Research Note #4: Inter-Fund Borrowing Among the Trust Funds In the early 1980s the Social Security Trust Funds had developed short-term cash flow problems, as a result of the adverse performance of the economy during the \"stagflation\" of the 1970s. As a stop-gap measure, Congress passed legislation in 1981 to permit inter-fund borrowing among the three Trust Funds (the Old-Age and Survivors Trust Fund; the Disability Trust Fund; and the Medicare Trust Fund). This authority was to lapse at the end of 1982. However, the 1983 Amendments extended the inter-fund borrowing authority to the end of 1987. Under the law as amended, all loans would have to be repaid by the end of 1989. The inter-fund loans were required to be repaid with an amount of interest equal to that which the loaning fund would have earned had it had use of the money during this time. In other words, the borrowing fund was required to make the loaning fund whole at the end of the process. This authority was used twice, once in November 1982 and once in December 1982. The total amount borrowed was $17.5 billion. The Old-Age and Survivors Trust Fund borrowed the money-$5.1 billion from the Disability Trust Fund and $12.4 billion from the Medicare Trust Fund. Repayment began in 1985 and the debt to the Medicare Trust Fund was paid off by January 1986 and the debt to the Disability Trust Fund was liquidated in April 1986. Larry DeWitt SSA Historian's Office 12/17/98
You are responsible for returning borrowed items on time, and for any fees associated with lost or unreturned items. A receipt indicating the date due is issued with every item you borrow.Please note that your Library card alone does not allow access to certain Special Collections; check with the appropriate division for details.
Patrons are responsible for any library materials borrowed on their card until they are checked in at a New York Public Library location and cleared from their list of checked out items. If you believe you have returned an item, you must call or visit The Library to claim it returned. To expedite the process, it is strongly suggested that you visit the Library from which you borrowed the item and request staff check the shelves for it. If the item is not found, you will have until the end of The Library's billing cycle to locate it and return it before a replacement charge is applied to your record. Until the item is found or replacement charges are paid, you will continue to receive overdue notices and the item will appear on your record with its status changed to that of a Claimed Returned/Disputed Item. This status will also be applied in cases where an item appears on your record that you do not recall checking out and the same notice and billing cycle apply.The surest way to know that an item is no longer checked out to you is to request a return receipt at check-in.
A borrowed license is tied to the MAC address (the 12-character host ID) of the network adapter used when you borrowed the license. If a computer is connected to a docking station, consider whether you will use it after borrowing the license. If not, undock the laptop first and then reconnect to the network to borrow the license.
Under the new dynamics of the fed funds market, borrowing transactions can reflect arbitrage activity between fed funds rates and IOER. Borrowing institutions have an incentive to borrow fed funds at a rate below the IOER rate and then hold their borrowed funds in their reserve account to receive IOER and thus earn a positive spread on the transaction. Differences in capital requirements may make such transactions comparatively more attractive for foreign banks.
A borrowed chord (also called mode mixture,[1] modal mixture,[2] substituted chord,[3] modal interchange,[1] or mutation[4]) is a chord borrowed from the parallel key (minor or major scale with the same tonic). Borrowed chords are typically used as \"color chords\", providing harmonic variety through contrasting scale forms, which are major scales and the three forms of minor scales.[2] Chords may also be borrowed from other parallel modes besides the major and minor mode, for example D Dorian with D major.[1] The mixing of the major and minor modes developed in the Baroque period.[5]
Borrowed chords are distinguished from modulation by being brief enough that the tonic is not lost or displaced, and may be considered brief or transitory modulations[3] and may be distinguished from secondary chords[6] as well as altered chords.[1] According to Sheila Romeo, \"[t]he borrowed chord suggests the sound of its own mode without actually switching to that mode.\"[1]
Sheila Romeo explains that \"[i]n theory, any chord from any mode of the scale of the piece is a potential modal interchange or borrowed chord. Some are used more frequently than others, while some almost never occur.\"[1]
Borrowed connections that are not closed will remain borrowed; subsequent requests for a connection result in a new connection being created if no connections are available. This behavior can cause many connections to be created and can affect system performance.
The policy covering the vehicle would be primary and in most cases, your policy would cover the vehicle on an excess basis. If no policy covers the borrowed car, most companies will treat your policy as the primary coverage for the borrowed car.
Media Equipment and Loaner Laptops: Students who have checked out media equipment or loaner laptops should start a chat with STC to return this equipment. If you have not received instructions that say otherwise, your equipment is due May 19, 2022. Please do not return this equipment via outdoor bookdrops. Students are responsible for ensuring that borrowed equipment is not lost or broken as long as it is in their care. Equipment that is returned after the due date on your reservation, damaged, or lost will incur a fine. Please note that you may receive an email regarding a late fee, even after returning your device by the stated due date on your reservation. This is due to our equipment quaratine period, and will be removed after our intake process is complete.
Click the Perform Status Enquiry button. LMTOOLS displays the status information in the output window. In the status information, each entry in the list for a product shows the total number of licenses for the product and tells how many licenses are currently checked out. For borrowed licenses, the entry for the product includes the keyword (linger:XXX), where XXX specifies the borrow period in seconds.
In the status information returned by lmstat, each entry in the list for a product shows the total number of licenses for the product and tells how many licenses are currently checked out. For borrowed licenses, the entry for the product includes the keyword (linger:XXX), where XXX specifies the borrow period in seconds.
Request renewal of your Interlibrary Loan materials by logging into your Interlibrary Loan account. Titles borrowed through TRLN Direct or BorrowDirect will appear in your Library Account (not your Interlibrary Loan account).
All borrowed items must be returned on time and in the same condition! The exact items borrowed must be returned; replacements will not be accepted. If you return a borrowed item late, damaged, or missing any components, such as a charger, you will be charged a fine. You will be charged a replacement fee for items that are lost or not returned. The amount of the late fine or replacement fee is determined by the value of the borrowed item(s).
The U.S. has carried debt since its inception. Debts incurred during the American Revolutionary War amounted to $75 million, primarily borrowed from domestic investors and the French Government for war materials.
The national debt is the amount of money the federal government has borrowed to cover the outstanding balance of expenses incurred over time. In a given fiscal year (FY), when spending (ex. money for roadways) exceeds revenue (ex. money from federal income tax), a budget deficit results. To pay for this deficit, the federal government borrows money by selling marketable securities such as Treasury bonds, bills, notes, floating rate notes, and Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS). The national debt is the accumulation of this borrowing along with associated interest owed to the investors who purchased these securities. As the federal government experiences reoccurring deficits, which is common, the national debt grows.
Preferably, return the item to the library you borrowed it from or return it to your \"home\" local library. However, you can return the item to any of the participating libraries, should the need arise. The goal of this program is convenience and customer service!
Debt held by the public (DHBP) is the amount that the Treasury has borrowed from outside lenders through financial markets to support government activities. Economists view DHBP as the most meaningful measure of debt; high levels of such debt, typically measured as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), can crowd out private investments in the economy, make it more difficult to respond to economic crises, and generate other concerns.
PLR's archive listings of the most borrowed authors in UK public libraries.The top 20 listings are broken down into adult and children's categories. The top 100/250/400/500 listings are a combination of both categories.These lists include authors who are registered with PLR as well as others who are dead or otherwise ineligible for remuneration under the PLR Scheme. Illustrators of books which have a separate writer have not been included. 59ce067264
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