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According to an official with Mitsui Manufacturers Bank, the Middlesex County court later ordered that Epstein's Harvard salary be docked. Harvard must pay the bank $13,000 annually in equal monthly installments, to be deducted from Epstein's paycheck, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity...

Author: By Stephen E. Frank, | Title: B-School Prof. Says Suit Settled | 4/29/1993 | See Source »

Epstein said last month's action, resulting from an ex parte motion brought by the bank, did not hold up his paycheck because he was not scheduled to be paid that week. He said the dispute was settled the following week, and never involved Harvard...

Author: By Stephen E. Frank, | Title: B-School Prof. Says Suit Settled | 4/29/1993 | See Source »

...filed with the Middlesex court earlier this year, bank Vice President Karen Willey expressed concern that Epstein might leave Massachusetts when he learned of the lawsuit here. She said in the affidavit that for this reason, the court should allow Manufacturers Bank to take the money from his Harvard paycheck...

Author: By Joe Mathews, | Title: California Bank Sues HBS Prof. | 4/28/1993 | See Source »

...most visible part of America's enormous new temporary work force. An additional 34 million people start their day as other types of "contingent" workers. Some are part-timers with some benefits. Others work by the hour, the day or the duration of a project, receiving only a paycheck without benefits of any kind. The rules of their employment vary widely and so do the attempts to label them. They are called short-timers, per-diem workers, leased employees, extra workers, supplementals, contractors -- or in IBM's ironic computer-generated parlance, "the peripherals." They are what you might expect: secretaries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Disposable Workers | 3/29/1993 | See Source »

Remember: Some Stars Are Worth the Paycheck. He broods, suicidally, about his blindness. He snarls orders like the Army lieutenant colonel he once was. He pretends to a worldliness that is not entirely authentic, and he can't quite hide the arrested adolescent lurking beneath his spit, polish and bluster. Frank Slade is a piece of work, all right, and playing him Al Pacino is always an actor acting -- in love with his own prodigious technique. For which, thank heaven, it permits him to range boldly outside the conventional lines of Bo Goldman's script for Scent of a Woman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why The Christmas Films Don't Sparkle | 12/28/1992 | See Source »

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