Word: repay
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Initial average salaries for those graduates entering corporate law firms range from $20,000 to $30,000 and may reach as high as $33,000 in New York City. With debts from college and law school to repay, many students "do feel like treating themselves to something after graduating," Jeffrey G. Thomas, a recent Law School graduate who joined a large Los Angeles corporate law firm, said yesterday...
...loans from the University of Minnesota, and says, "I've always wanted to be sure that I didn't take more from the system than I was putting back." There is Shapiro's friend Reg Jones, a British-born intellectual, who has been similarly motivated to repay the society in which he climbed to become chairman of General Electric. And Citicorp's Walter Wriston, imbued with public commitment by his father, a university president who was also a high Government adviser. And A T & T's former Chairman John deButts, the courtly North Carolinian...
...copper, cotton and even cattle. Gold alone, which had reached a preposterous height of $850 per oz. in late January, dropped to a low of $463 last week. In the stock market, further rumors reported that Hunt and his associates were dumping stocks to raise cash in order to repay their silver loans, and that their maneuvers had threatened the major investment house of Bache Halsey Stuart Shields. That led to what one Wall Street veteran called "a classic case of panic." The Dow Jones industrial average fell 25 points within a few hours, then recouped 23 points...
...Ylisaker did see Xia Chuzhang again when its Littauer School of Government classmate visited the Ed School last April with a delegation of other Chinese educators. Almost a year after that "grand reunion," Ylvisaker and Ed School doctoral candidate Abigail Housen will repay the courtesy when they go to the People's Republic of China Thursday...
Although the SEC is unlikely to press its inquiry now that Hefner has agreed to repay the company, Playboy is still contesting an assessment of about $13.4 million in taxes due the Internal Revenue Service between 1970 and 1976, including $ 1.4 million that taxmen say Hefner owes for his use of the mansions. Nor is this an end to trouble in the hutch. Bunnies are no longer multiplying like rabbits, and for the first time Playboy Clubs are having to hustle for bustle. Evidently, being a bunny these days, like being a playboy, is not what it used...