Word: club
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
There are also questions about whether Spitzer could be prosecuted for tax fraud if he "structured" his payments to the Emperors Club VIP through shell companies. "What it's really going to depend on is how the money was paid," Burstein told TIME, adding, "If his name was not Eliot Spitzer, it's virtually inconceivable that there would be any question of prosecution." Still, he put the odds...
...newspaper,” Dershowitz said. Spitzer served as New York State attorney general for eight years and was elected governor in 2007. A wiretap caught Spitzer in Washington, D.C. negotiating a meeting with a “model” named Kristen, an employee of the Emperors Club VIP, an “international prostitution and money-laundering ring,” according to law enforcement authorities. Ironically, in 2004 Spitzer announced the arrest of 16 people operating a prostitution ring in Staten Island and condemned their behavior. Late yesterday afternoon, the Republican leader of the New York State...
Former White House Deputy Chief of Staff Karl C. Rove will be speaking at Harvard on April 4, according to members of the executive board of the Harvard Republican Club (HRC). The event, sponsored by the HRC, is slated to take place in the Winthrop Junior Common Room and to be open to all members of the Harvard community. “Someone with the type of political genius he has happens only once in a generation, and when we have the chance to bring someone like that here, it’s a great opportunity,” said...
...Mass. Ave. drew bemused glances from tourists and prospective students and silent confusion from local pedestrians. But other reactions were less favorable. “I would think Harvard students have better things to do with their time than institute fake protests,” said Harvard Republican Club President Caleb L. Weatherl ’10. “It’s mindless stuff like this that gives people the impression that Harvard is full of crazy, fringe left-wingers.” Weatherl was particularly critical of the group’s satire of supporting the troops...
While Jason A. Bergsman, the co-president of the Harvard Business School Entertainment & Media Club, believes that the “Quarterlife” project is “certainly an ambitious and well-intentioned effort,” he admits that it is “difficult to create a social network around new content without a firmly-established, passionate fan base...