Word: filed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...fact, federal bank examiners and Comptroller of the Currency John Heimann had found that Lance had violated civil statutes banning loans of more than $5,000 from a bank to any executive of that bank, and in failing to file reports to his two banks' directors on his many loans and his outside business interests. Heimann had concluded only that prosecution was not warranted. The Justice Department, the IRS and the Federal Election Commission, moreover, are investigating Lance's frequent use of a National Bank of Georgia airplane for apparently personal and political purposes...
...real is the Le Carré construction? Do his plots correspond with true moral quandaries? Says one American CIA official: "We know that our work plays havoc with our personal lives. We know that an awful lot of what we have to do is slogging through file cards and computer printouts. Poor George Smiley. That...
...travel and do everyday things without being recognized." Later in the week they visited Keaton's grandmother, Grammy Hall, and toured the Hollywood hills, looking at houses that Keaton had considered buying. Castro taped more than ten hours of their conversation while gathering information for her 66-page file to Contributor John Skow, who wrote the story. But some of her best insights came when the recorder was switched off. Says Castro: "Diane is a very private person who sometimes finds it difficult to articulate her feelings. For instance, we had already touched on things like her self-consciousness...
...second-story man in her house, engages him in conversation, gives him a drink to get his fingerprints. When he flees she calls the police, who refuse to dust the glass for prints because "it's too much trouble." Completing their "investigation," they leave the flabbergasted householder to file their report...
...twelve-month rule was the hottest issue at Blackpool. Veteran union leaders who support it were jeered by the militant rank and file; one union chief, National Union of Mineworkers President Joe Gormley, was spat upon and called a "scab" by demonstrators. It was left to the Prime Minister himself, a trades-union member for four decades, to make the most effective case for wage restraint. In a forceful, televised sermonette, Callaghan pointed out that wage increases above 10% would "seriously weaken" the government's chances of containing inflation. "I was brought up to believe that free collective bargaining...