Europe, at this time, would merit the attentions of the US Depression-era author John Steinbeck.
" His dad called the Duesenberg--that Depression-era carriage of kings and kingpins--"the greatest car ever built.
Mr. Einhorn has publicly criticized the company for a Depression-era mentality for hoarding cash.
As a boy, Praus learned how to fish and hunt, but enjoyed collecting Depression-era glassware vases.
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The reusing, recycling, and repackaging that take place in Lubbock's cotton industry today would shame the thriftiest Depression-era housewives.
He pointed to the example of Herbert Hoover, the Depression-era president who signed protectionist legislation into law.
In general a handful of homes toting Depression-era gangster ties have burst onto the sale block this year.
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Tom Hanks plays a Depression-era mob assassin, a family man with a small moustache and a stiff walk.
"Apple doesn't have a depression-era mentality, " he said in response to criticism that Apple is hoarding its money.
Investors were told in 1998 that the financial industry had become smarter and more sophisticated than its Depression-era predecessors.
His latest movie, Lawless, had the potential to be a Depression-era gangster hit.
The SEC has eliminated some references to ratings from Depression-era laws and has proposed reducing their importance to asset-backed securities.
They took on much more risk than their parents, whose generation grew up with a Great Depression-era distrust of Wall Street.
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These problems, notably a dust bowl that dwarfs that of the Depression-era U.S., are adding millions of new refugees every year.
His most recent effort, the sprawling 17-song folk tale My Name Is Buddy, revisits the Dustbowl ballad form and Depression-era road songs.
Two years later, just when the bubble was about to burst, the SEC removed the Depression-era protections against abuses by short sellers of securities.
Bank loan officers must feel like Marriner Eccles, the Depression-era Federal Reserve chairman who famously equated the Fed's stimulus efforts with pushing on a string.
Politicians such as Phil Gramm, formerly a senator from Texas, sponsored the repeal of the Glass-Steagall act, a Depression-era separation of investment and retail banking.
Lindner Sr. drastically cut prices by eliminating delivery costs and offering his goods through a cash-and-carry storefront, a model that proved popular with his depression-era customer base.
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The mining magnate plans to revive the Great Depression-era party and stand candidates for every seat in the House of Representatives and Senate at general elections on Sept. 14.
Take "The Purple Rose of Cairo, " a Depression-era saga about an abused woman who watches a movie repeatedly until its hero comes down off the screen and romances her.
Why, if politicians are at last to do something about the Depression-era rules that govern financial firms, have they not tried to update America's supervisory structure at the same time?
Economists point out that this obviously won't be like Franklin Roosevelt's Depression-era program that allowed virtually anyone with the strength to wield a shovel to join a construction crew or move to a work camp.
Mr Einhorn objects to the fact that a significant percentage of his investment in Apple shares in effect sits idle, invested in cash that pays very little return and has accused Apple of a "Depression-era mentality".
Much of the proliferating comic energy of this 19-person play about a slightly cracked Depression-era family arises from the fact that the stage is packed with people who are doing unpredictable things to and with one another.
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Many bankers say reforms should not go so far as to stifle profits that would return the banking sector to health, and they argue against a return to Depression-era laws that carved up the world of finance.
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America still has one of the world's most diverse banking markets, with more than 8, 000 banks and nearly 100, 000 branches, thanks partly to Depression-era laws in most states which imposed strict limits on how big banks could become.
Inspired by the Depression-era Farm Security Administration photography project, its photographers shot everything from small Midwestern towns, barrios in the Southwest and coal-mining communities in Appalachia to African-Americans in Chicago, urban renewal in Kansas City and migrant farm workers in Colorado.
The requirement for senior executives to put their own signature to company accounts themselves is just one aspect of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which was rushed through Congress in response to the string of scandals and which is one of the most far-reaching pieces of financial legislation since Depression-era laws established the SEC almost 70 years ago.
"Good bank, bad bank" is a throwback to the Depression era--and to the savings-and-loan crisis of the late 1980s.
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