weal (exact matches only)
The CBO data show that even with "tax cuts for the wealthy," the rich are paying taxes at a minusculely lower rate than before and shouldering a greater burden of the income-tax liability.
He was an older man, a rich filmmaker who has left her with homes and wealth, and a daughter.
Government agencies and universities post a wealth of information about occupational safety on their Web sites.
Commodus confiscated the villa in AD 182, after he sent its owners, the wealthy Quintilius brothers, to death for supposedly plotting against him.
Max writes, “Life is short, and full of sorrows, and I loved it.” His poignantly awry existence, set out with such a wealth of verbal flourishes and gilded touches, serves as a heightened version of the strangeness, the muted disharmony, of being human.
Like all people in exalted office who reflect on their long and diligent labours on behalf of the public weal, Mr. Greenspan is concerned about his legacy, how posterity will treat his reign at the Federal Reserve.
The town has been wrestling with the state on education funding since 1997, when Act 60 was enacted in response to a state Supreme Court decision requiring that the same amount of money be spent on educating each student, regardless of a town’s property wealth.
But when his dreams of wealth and prestige seemed impossible to realize with probity, he segued smoothly into a career as a confidence man.
With birth rates slumping and people living longer developed countries need to find a solution to demographic change or face the prospect of shrinking wealth, the World Economic Forum said ahead of its annual meeting this week in Davos, Switzerland.
With increased wealth and lengthy vacations, many English now travel regularly to the U.S. Urbane Brits love New York City.
"We just want to make sure that Iraq's oil wealth is never again used against Kurds."Truffaut fans will delight in Jean-Pierre Léaud's cameo as a dense, wealthy art collector.
Americans rallied against racism, sexism and white privilege, but when it came to a more equal distribution of wealth, "people were silent." Although the gap narrowed in the mid-1990s, it has been widening again since 2000, when the top 1 percent of Americans held a third of the nation's wealth, said Jeff Lustig, a government professor at California State University, Sacramento.
"The culture of wealth infects every single person in this generation," Pinkston said.
... He would also see problems in educational achievement and gaps in wealth and income.
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