Word: edithe
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...know who all got the virus," admits the proprietor . of one such establishment. By exchanging needles, the project also reduces the number of contaminated needles that find their way into the city's parks, playgrounds and schools. "We used to find needles scattered throughout the building," says Edith Rawls, resident director of the downtown Y.M.C.A., which houses 131 men and women (75% are addicts). "There were dirty needles in the hallways and the bathrooms. Children would see them outside and pick them...
...share of champions. "On balance, Chapter 11 has been positive for the economy," says Edward Altman, a finance professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. "It conserves the assets and values of firms that have temporary problems but can be rehabilitated." Altman and doctoral student Edith Hotchkiss conducted a study that found that at least half the 1,096 firms entering Chapter 11 between 1979 and 1991 emerged successfully and have managed to stay out. That study focused exclusively on publicly held companies in Chapter...
...eight third-year law students who apologized for their involvement in the issue were Paul Clement, Andrew Fish, Mark Harris, Janis Kestenbaum, Sean Lev, Robert Niewyk, Edith Ramirez and former Law Review President David Ellen...
...govern quietly, and she did not go quietly. Sharp-tongued Prime Minister Edith Cresson, 58, drew fire while in office for having called the Japanese "ants" and saying that one-quarter of Anglo-Saxon men are homosexuals. In her letter of resignation, she complained that she had not been allowed to "fully complete" her mission...
...extravagant unpopularity of Prime Minister Edith Cresson is harder to understand. Her acid tongue -- she called the Japanese "ants" and implied that 25% of British men were homosexual -- got her in trouble, but more recently she has been minding her manners. Nonetheless, her popularity has continued to drop, dragging down Mitterrand's with...