Word: funds
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...there is any matter on which the original intent of the founders is clear, it is the issue of slavery. Says Columbia Law Professor Jack Greenberg, former director-counsel of the N.A.A.C.P. Legal Defense and Educational Fund: "The original Constitution not only accepted slavery, but it gave the South a bonus for it" -- the stipulation in Article I, Section 3 that in apportioning Representatives for the House, "three fifths of all other persons" should be added to the "whole number of free persons...
Some U.S. firms have tried to ease the impact of divestiture by making farewell investments in social programs. Coke pledged to spend $10 million during the next five years to fund a foundation to assist education and development among South Africa's "disadvantaged." IBM left $10 million for a literacy program to aid 37,000 black schoolchildren. Many companies that divested their South African holdings had been setting aside some of their earnings for social services, but some of their successors have refused to take on those commitments...
...self- defense, about street crime and racism. -- The President prepares for battle as Congress moves toward a tax increase. -- A retired CIA director stops by KGB headquarters on a trip to Moscow. -- Once again Oliver North refuses to testify. -- The Administration is accused of using the Saudis to fund Angolan rebels...
...devotees ran to the upper middle class, white, with impressive academic credentials. They dressed like Dharma bums in the beginning, but soon the teacher had them shaved, suited and cravated. If they did not exactly turn their pockets inside out for their teacher -- and some did -- they made good fund raisers. Moreover, he encouraged them to be all they could be, in their professions as well as their heads. Successful executives, lawyers, doctors, dentists, shrinks, anthropologists, poets (Allen Ginsberg), novelists (William Burroughs) and composers (John Cage) dog-eared his card in their Rolodexes. Even the selection of Boulder...
Ranked just below David-Weill on the FinancialWorld roster were such eminences as George Soros, 56, president of Manhattan's Soros Fund Management ($90 million to $100 million); Richard Dennis, 38, a partner in Chicago- based C&D Commodities ($80 million); and Junk Bond King Michael Milken, 40, senior executive vice president of the Drexel Burnham Lambert investment firm (up to $80 million). Not far behind, at $65 million or so, was J. Morton Davis, 58, chairman and president of D.H. Blair, a Manhattan investment bank that specializes in stock offerings for health-care firms...