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...scandal at Stix began with a routine IRS audit of the firm's senior vice president, Thomas R. Brimberry. Brimberry, 38, joined the firm in 1973 as an $8,000-a-year clerical worker. Five years later, he was promoted to senior vice president in charge of operations, a post he snared when his friend and lawyer, James Massa, bought controlling interest in the firm. The onetime clerk quickly became a high roller, building a home worth some $800,000 in a St. Louis suburb and making frequent gambling jaunts to the casinos of Nassau and Nevada...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bilking Broker | 11/30/1981 | See Source »

...perhaps it should not surprise us that Jordan does not delineate the problems of the black poor. Those who profess to defend the interests of the poor usually do not serve on corporate boards. Those who seek to save the oppressed usually do not find a $200,000-a-year corporate law job the most efficacious method of performing that task...

Author: By Robert A. Watts, | Title: Failing to Help Those Who Need Help Most | 10/30/1981 | See Source »

...business end of the Crimson has grown dramatically in recent years, and if you're looking for hands-on experience at a $400,000-a-year corporation, 14 Plympton St. is for you. Students run it all, from selling ads to setting up contract printing; individual tutors will teach you all you need to know to become a part of our business...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Comp Meetings | 9/26/1981 | See Source »

Among the other six semi-finalists in the running for the $42,000-a-year job, five are superintendents of local public school systems...

Author: By Jacob M. Schlesinger, | Title: Bane, Professor at K-School, May Get State Education Post | 9/23/1981 | See Source »

...government and police force had been under extensive federal investigation. Apparently frustrated by the lack of results, the FBI decided to try an old-fashioned sting. The bait was Thomas Marra Jr., 28, a convicted car thief awaiting sentencing. Marra's father and uncle held a $100,000-a-year contract from Bridgeport to tow stolen cars-or did until last May, when motorists complained that equipment had been pilfered from the recovered autos. The FBI plan: Marra would offer Police Superintendent Joseph Walsh $30,000 to reinstate the contract. Walsh agreed to talk about it last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americana: Sting Gets Stung | 8/31/1981 | See Source »

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