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...very large sum of money, fortunately," he said...

Author: By Matthew W. Granade and Adam S. Hickey, S | Title: Library Fundraising Campaign Falling Short | 4/17/1997 | See Source »

...contests) entails getting on stage with several other women and showing most of your merchandise to a crowd of 300 or so; she who elicits the most grunts and yells, wins. There are male equivalents (though fewer of them) to these contests, such as the Hot Bod Contest. In sum, many students of both sexes, while away from their respective colleges, decide to "let loose" and party hardly in a most candid...

Author: By Daniel M.suleiman, | Title: The Spring Break Id | 4/2/1997 | See Source »

...teaching that all Jews are good and all Germans are bad." Where is the evidence that I have ever said, written or "understood" this about either Jews and Germans? What is The Crimson's evidence? In fact, in my review of Sack's book, I wrote, "Some Jews, in sum, became murderers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sack Letter Untrue and Offensive | 3/31/1997 | See Source »

Pitt's Frankie McGuire is an assassin for an unnamed group of Northern Irish terrorists sent to America to evade the British secret service, whose noose is beginning to tighten around him. He carries a vast sum of money and instructions to purchase a shipment of Stinger missiles capable of rebalancing the power in Belfast. Given an assumed name and occupation, he enters the country, and the home of Ford's Tom O'Meara, as an ordinary immigrant needing a sponsor. Since Tom is a New York City cop of unquestionable honesty, Frankie's cover is perfect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: SYMPATHY FOR THE DEVIL | 3/31/1997 | See Source »

Tobacco investors have made it clear how badly they want a settlement. Late last month, for example, rumors swirled about a settlement under which tobacco companies would pay the hefty sum of $10 billion a year--more than the industry currently earns. Philip Morris stock promptly rose $6, creating $5 billion of market value and sending up a smoke signal so dense that even the long-in-denial tobacco industry had to notice. The burning question is this: If the market is ready to embrace such a costly settlement--and antitobacco forces, realizing they're getting nowhere fast in their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PAY UP, PHILIP MORRIS! | 3/17/1997 | See Source »

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