Word: loaned
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...that France had begun to take "serious steps" toward meeting their demands. In June, for example, the French compelled an Iranian opposition leader, Massoud Rajavi, and 300 of his mujahedin followers to leave France for Baghdad. In November France agreed to make an initial payment on a $1 billion loan extended in 1975 by the late Shah to the French nuclear power program...
...American industries are currently more merger mad than banking. This year alone, scores of banks and savings and loan associations have joined forces with other institutions. Last week the fever spread all the way from New York City to Texas. First, Chemical New York, whose $56 billion in assets make it the seventh largest U.S. bank holding company, agreed to acquire Houston's Texas Commerce Bancshares (assets: $18.9 billion) for $1.19 billion. If completed, the merger will be among the biggest in U.S. banking history and will create the fourth largest bank company, behind Citicorp, BankAmerica and Chase Manhattan...
...five second-year MPP's said they organized the campaign because they had heard K-School administrators were thinking about instituting a loan forgiveness program. "We just wanted to make the issue a little more public, and put a little pressure on," said one organizer Martin J. Letourneau, a second year grad student...
Naturally, Orsay begins with an advantage: the huge, untapped reserves of France's government-owned 19th century art. These collections of painting and sculpture were spread very widely, throughout Paris and on loan to regional museums and government offices. Orsay has called them in and resifted them. The best-known of these collections was that of Paris' renowned impressionist museum, the Jeu de Paume, which, before its collection was moved across the Seine last summer, was attracting three-quarters of a million visitors annually to gaze at its superb Cezannes, Monets, Renoirs, Van Goghs and Lautrecs. There was a residue...
...Delacroix's Massacre at Chios and his Death of Sardanapalus, Courbet's The Studio and Funeral at Ornans and so on, ad infinitum -- are in the Louvre that Laclotte was faced with appalling difficulties in getting anything to cross the Seine to Orsay. Moreover, since he was only on loan to Orsay, he wanted to go back to an undepleted Louvre when his work on the Left Bank was over. Giscard had to take the unusual step of inviting the Louvre's curators to the Elysee for lunch in order to persuade them to give up some of "their" paintings...