Ultimately, the $ 52 million aquarium will depend upon tax-exempt revenue bonds to pay its way, said Robert T . O'Connor, the aquarium's director of development and finance.
32.
"Bate promised his mother, though she had never seen her, that she would send him back, " says Dumas, who stored the body at Sheffield until the immigrants could pay its way.
33.
Steam tram operation was introduced quickly, but the network always struggled to pay its way and just after the start of the 20th century Wigan Corporation gradually bought the operating leases and converted the network to electric tramcar operation.
34.
Reviewing for the " New Statesman ", Hugo Barnacle was more critical of the novel, finding the prose " self-consciously literary " and commenting that it " doesn't quite pay its way ".
35.
The other day Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev said that the project of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil export pipeline would only pay its way if both Azerbaijani and Kazakh oil were pumped through it to Turkey's Mediterranean port.
36.
The best way to stimulate the economy is through a temporary tax cut, or a rebate, that does not undermine the nation's long-term capacity to raise tax revenues to pay its way, make life better or simply avoid big deficits.
37.
The auction July 1, which also sold hundreds of giraffes, zebras and antelope for a total of 5.1 million rands ( dlrs 1.4 million ), was a glimpse of a future where conservationists say Africa's wildlife will have to pay its way to survive.
38.
This was only possible because of an arrangement with the Hertfordshire County Council giving them sole use of the greater part of the club house as a children's nursery, and the financial arrangements made with the County during the war, and compensation when the war was ended enabled the Club to pay its way and accumulate a small surplus.
39.
But I hope that President-elect Bush will realize a natural leadership role the U . S . has in this building and in the world _ and hopefully agree with me that if the U . S . were to pay its way and work constructively with other like-minded states, it can get a lot done in this organization and around the world,
40.
Eventually the straw plait trade declined and the need for goods trains gave way to passenger demand; local businessmen wanted a fast route into London without having to go via Luton, and in order to help the line pay its way the junction at Harpenden was realigned in 1888 so that it headed south instead of north, and passengers now changed trains at Harpenden Junction.