Word: repays
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Reagan Administration now that it has suspended its efforts to block the Siberian natural gas pipeline and begun to pursue arms control negotiations. Italian President Pertini, whose country is constructing NATO's first cruise missile base, has no substantial problems to raise with Reagan and is eager to repay the warm welcome he received in Washington last March...
There are about 5,000 collection agencies in the U.S., all with varying methods and successes. One of the largest law firms in the business is Long Island's Sharinn & Lipshie. At any given moment, it is trying to get about 20,000 debtors to repay about $10 million to such clients as Citibank and General Electric Credit Corp. It starts with a series of three warning letters that cost the creditor $5.50. Eventually, it claims collections...
...payment of $2.4 billion in loans, which were actually due last year. The solemn signing at the glass-and-aluminum-sheathed headquarters of the Dresdner Bank in Frankfurt removed one obstacle to the start of talks on extending the deadline on $4.6 billion that Poland is scheduled to repay banks and governments this year...
Bankers, who once feared that their Polish loans might become total losses, seemed satisfied with last week's settlement. It requires the Poles to pay a stiff 1.75% above the basic international lending rate (currently 15½%). Warsaw is to repay $120 million this year, and the remaining $2.28 billion in twice-a-year installments beginning in December 1985. Notes an official of one of the 500 banks that took part in the agreement: "This all demonstrates that Poland has the ability to do more than people thought it could...
Describing several possible alternatives to Reagan's proposals. Bok suggested a "contingent" plan which would fix interest rate or amount of repayment depending on a student's starting income after graduation. Highly-paid medical or law school students, for example, might repay more of their loans than graduates who become teachers or ministers at substantially lower salaries...