Word: dealing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
APRIL 29 A judge rules Monica has no deal with Starr. Well, at least the Vanity Fair pix deal stuck. "The surrogate father has to figure out ways to get her ego back to par," says Ginsburg...
...family inn, state senator Peter Shumlin, an Act 60 advocate, takes the high-minded approach. "It's your responsibility as Vermonters to educate all our kids," he says. But later he growls at his opponent, "I don't blame you for not liking Act 60. You had a great deal, and it's coming to an end." That outburst leaves the air almost neon with anger. "It makes me feel like someone is going to get shot," says anti-Act 60 activist Mary Barrosse...
Around Washington, where both men are as familiar as the skybox in the stadium where the Redskins play, everybody understands that these guys are prepared to go to trial if they must but even more prepared to deal if they can. If they strike the deal that Ginsburg could not, one that gives Lewinsky immunity from prosecution in exchange for her testimony, it could mean trouble for the White House. On the whole, Ginsburg wasn't entirely bad for Bill Clinton. The lawyer's attacks on Starr did nothing to hasten the day when his client could enter an agreement...
PARIS: As one embarassing conflict ended, so another began. Air France pilots reached a strike-breaking deal early Wednesday with just hours left on the clock before the World Cup began -- but any feelings of relief in the French capital were dampened by clashes between drunken fans and overzealous police on the Champs Elysées. During what was supposed to be a celebration of the global tournament, security-minded gendarmes pushed the crowd behind a maze of barriers. Several hundred local supporters started throwing bottles, and riot troops responded with tear gas. With 34 injured and 50 arrested...
...Parisian youths may be turning into hooligans, but at least the pilots have stopped acting like high-paid crybabies. Wednesday's deal means the highest-paid workers in France will start flying again, albeit with an agreement to take a 50,000-franc ($8,350) pay cut and accept a percentage of the company in return. For its part, Air France scrapped a two-tier pay system and promised the pilots that this is not the slippery slope to privatization. All well and good, but the fans still trapped at home by the World Cup carrier's strike will still...