Word: partnerships
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...diplomacy avoided an invasion and allowed the peaceful deployment of American troops. But there were conditions, the primary one being that the junta would remain in power, and the Haitian police in control, until October 15, the date set for President Aristide's return. Thus the strange and uncomfortable partnership between U.S. and Haitian forces...
...nine trusts for his children and grandchildren. After her husband's death in 1986, Pamela became a general partner in the enterprise. Within four years the initial $12 million investment had grown to $25 million. Clifford says the heirs complained they were not getting enough income, so the partnership overseeing funds diversified beyond securities. Some of the new investments were money losers. Clifford says more than $4.5 million was invested in a New Jersey resort that he admits "didn't develop in the manner we had hoped." The resort reportedly is partly owned by Robert Brennan, former head...
While he has been rebuffed here, Coles has been welcomed at Brown University. He is currently working to develop a partnership at Brown between the Swearer Center for Public Service and the School of Medicine, according to Peter C. Hocking, the Swearer Center's director...
Though the mission was saved, Mir's brush with disaster fanned doubts about the fitness of Russia's space program. That is of no small concern to the U.S., Canada, Europe and Japan, which have formed a partnership with Russia to build a new space station. In the first phase of the venture, the Europeans are scheduled to put an astronaut on Mir in October, and an American is supposed to go aboard next year...
Despite recent U.S. coyness on Russia's desired entry into the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Germany's Defense Minister made his country's position clear today, possibly setting up a rift with the Clinton Administration's Partnership for Peace Program. "If Russia were to become a member of NATO, that would blow NATO apart," Volker Ruehe told a conference of German and American business leaders. Why the snub? Ruehe claimed it would be too difficult to integrate the Russians into the Western alliance, in part because they refuse to learn English, the accepted "common" language of NATO. His U.S. counterpart...