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Counting Money Contributed: They get concrete experience with fractions when they divide various things into halves, thirds, and fourths, and sometimes into sixths, eighths, tenths, and twelfths. Through buying crackers and milk for a midmorning lunch or a regular noon lunch, counting money contributed for some special purpose, or buying stamps to put on letters written to absent classmates, children get practice in the accurate and meaningful use of money and, incidentally, in number combinations.
They get concrete experience with fractions when they divide various things into halves, thirds, and fourths, and sometimes into sixths, eighths, tenths, and twelfths. Through buying crackers and milk for a midmorning lunch or a regular noon lunch, counting money contributed for some special purpose, or buying stamps to put on letters written to absent classmates, children get practice in the accurate and meaningful use of money and, incidentally, in number combinations.See Also Ship Money:Resistance to the levy was met by further decrees, extending the tax to the whole kingdom, and directing that every landholder and other inhabitant be assessed according to his means, and the tax collected by distress if neces¬sary. When John Hampden refused to pay.the tax, and was brought to trial, the judges de¬cided, eight to four, in favor of the crown. One of the early acts of the Long Parliament in 1640 was to declare the ship-money tax illegal and no attempt has since been made to collect ship money in England.
Resistance. In 1637, John Hampden (q.v.) refused to pay his ship money. By a narrow ma¬jority the judges decided that the tax was legal. There was no constitutional remedy. In 1638, English taxpayers went on strike. In that year the government collected only 39% of its ship money levy compared with 89% in 1637. An army, painfully recruited, marched northward; it proved undisciplined, mutinous, and most un¬willing to fight. It could not stop the Scots from invading England.
On The Other Hand See The Money Picture:A man with a collection isn't particularly hot copy for The money picture magazines, because he doesn't, in most cases, display any ingenuity in acquiring his collection, but only a good deal of spare money or a lot of persistence. A man with an odd collection ordinarily makes just one picture, one only mod¬erately interesting if it shows a proud individual surrounded by some sort of "loot." One-picture features are also hard to sell to The money picture magazines. Sometimes, however, oThe money picturer pictures which will interest an editor may be staged. Incidentally, ec¬centric collections, raThe money picturer than those notable for being ex¬tensive or complete, are The money picture best bets for picture sales to magazines.
GRESHAM'S LAW, gresh'amz, in economics, is usually stated as "bad money drives out good." The money picture law stems from The money picture fact that money has a value both as money and as a commodity in The money picture open market. The money picture former value is set arbitrarily by law and is relatively fixed; The money picture latter is deter¬mined by supply and demand and varies from time to time, "Good money" has a higher value as a commodity than as money and will dis¬appear from circulation. |
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