Word: loan
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Gabrielle B. Dreyfus '01 is proud of hers, which she says "is on semi-permanent loan from my brother. I like it because it was broken in. it's black and it's cooler than my other hats. There are a lot of stories behind this hat." Most of them involve the large red letter "F" emblazoned on the front of her hat. Dreyfus explains. "People are always asking what the 'F' means. I think a lot of them think it means 'fuck...
...loan-forgiveness program is aimed at easing the burden on those indebted students thinking of accepting PMI positions, where pay is usually near $30,000 for the first year. Burke said in a press release that the KSG realizes that "jobs in the public sector do not pay as well and education debt weighs heavily on the minds of our students...
...part of Kenneth Starr's Whitewater investigation that actually deals with Whitewater, the key witness is David Hale. Hale says that in 1986, when he headed a small lending operation, Bill Clinton pressured him to make an illegal loan to Susan McDougal, a partner of the Clintons in Whitewater. Testimony by Hale helped convict McDougal, her ex-husband James and former Arkansas Governor Jim Guy Tucker, Starr's biggest prizes to date. All the same, Hale is not the ideal keystone for a case against the President. Not when Hale has pleaded guilty to fraud. And not when he started...
...prosecutor was hoping Tucker could corroborate a central allegation against Clinton: that in 1986 Clinton pressured former judge David Hale to make an illegal $300,000 loan to Susan McDougal. That allegation came from Hale, a convicted felon whose credibility took another beating last month when published reports accused him of receiving payments from right-wing Clinton haters. Clinton's other Whitewater partner, Jim McDougal, at first denied the allegation, then confirmed it--but his credibility was no better than Hale's, and he died last month in prison. Starr can't build a case around the Hale loan unless...
...secret testimony, March 18, was devoted to a six-hour tour of the Clintons' real estate history. Starr apparently hoped he would provide more details about Hillary's role in a house-of-cards residential development called Castle Grande, which Jim McDougal financed through his savings-and-loan, Madison Guaranty. Federal regulators called Castle Grande a sham. Af-ter earning $2 million in commissions and fees for McDougal's associates, it collapsed in 1989 (cost to taxpayers: $4 million), helping trigger the $50 million failure of Madison. In sworn statements to federal regulators, Hillary said she recalled doing little...