Not exact matches
The state has nearly
run out of cash three times since December, requiring budget officials to withhold tax refunds and payments from local
governments.
Separately, the Treasury could
run out of cash to pay its bills as soon as Oct. 18, unless Congress raises the
government's limits on borrowing.
Stop me if you've heard this one before: a gruff CIA agent who suffers from PTSD and sees re-animated corpses at random moments is ordered to travel to the UK and hire Stanley Kubrick to film a fake moon landing that the American
government can use in case the Apollo 11 mission turns
out to be a tragic failure, only the agent (who is played by Ron Perlman, by the way) ends up giving a suitcase full
of cash to a failed band manager and his perpetually stoned friend who looks a little bit like Stanley Kubrick, and those two idiots get robbed by the local mafia thugs right before Agent Ron Perlman realizes his mistake and threatens to kill everyone involved — and THEN the idiotic band manager (who is played by Rupert Grint, by the way) proposes that they all head off to film the fake moon landing with the help
of a artistic hippie commune
run by an egotistical dolt who can't understand why he can't put giant jellyfish on the moon.
She's on her way
out of a small neighborhood office she has been
running for a retired old doctor (perhaps a mentor, certainly a friend), treating folks on assistance and
government insurance, at times paying
out pocket in
cash, at others putting off payments, and into bigger practice with prestige, resources, and an more upscale clientele.
While
cash and
government bonds may be virtually risk free, stocks in small business
run the risk
of the company going
out of business every day.