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Word: businesswoman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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DALE YOUNG A Scarsdale, N.Y., businesswoman and friend to both Lewis and Lewinsky, she told the grand jury and later Newsweek that during a hike through the Catskills on Memorial Day weekend in 1996, Lewinsky divulged that while she and the President shared bouts of "intimate touching" near the Oval Office and some heated late-night phone calls, as a rule they stopped short of sexual climax. It was Clinton's preference. "It was basically like foreplay," Young concluded. "Nothing was ever taken to completion." The President "felt it really wasn't oral sex if it wasn't completed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What's in Starr's Files? | 8/10/1998 | See Source »

...Meanwhile, Newsweek reports that a 47-year-old New York businesswoman will testify to a physical relationship between the intern and the President. Dale Young, an alleged Lewinsky confidante reportedly told the magazine that Lewinsky had claimed she and the President had engaged in foreplay, but that "nothing was ever taken to conclusion." Adding new detail to the coy speculation over the latitude of definitions involved in the President's denial of the relationship, Young was quoted as saying, "He felt it wasn't really oral sex if it wasn't completed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Starr Turns Up the Heat | 6/29/1998 | See Source »

...charge dollar--can buy such goodies as a Harley-Davidson motorcycle, a two-bedroom apartment in London or part of the cost of a liposuction procedure, says Sanders. One member used 187,899 points to pay for a memorial headstone for her husband, who passed away last year. A businesswoman in Dayton, Ohio, who requested anonymity, cashed in 1.5 million points to pay for her daughter's bat mitzvah in Israel and took 13 members of her immediate family on a week's tour of the country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Frequent Surprises | 5/25/1998 | See Source »

...successful from the start--7,000 guests have stayed there so far--and Leslie blossomed into a confident, effective businesswoman. But while she landscaped her property and planted her gardens, she began wishing that others would do the same. So she launched a successful campaign to have her neighborhood declared a national historic district, a six-month drive that introduced Leslie to her neighbors. Soon they were planting flowers and sprucing up their homes just as she had hoped. "That's what newcomers can do for a town," she says. "Make old-timers see the place with fresh eyes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE GREAT ESCAPE | 12/8/1997 | See Source »

...educated secularites of the suburban Bay began in the '80s to lean Democratic and were ripe for the wonkish Clinton. He was fiscally disciplined, culturally tolerant and enthusiastic about the high-tech industries on which their prosperity was built. Tauscher followed in his wake. A millionaire former stockbroker and businesswoman, she looked, at first glance, like a Rockefeller Republican. Her husband actually was a Republican. In 1996 Tauscher took on an incumbent Republican, attacked him for opposing abortion and gun control, and won a seat in Congress...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHY THE DEMOCRATIC CENTER CAN'T HOLD | 11/24/1997 | See Source »

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