Word: sweetheart
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...perimeter is just the thing to get reporters sniffing. Earlier this year James McDougal, the Clintons' former partner in Whitewater, made matters worse when he began suggesting that the First Couple had never invested more than $13,500 of their own money. That sounded suspiciously like Whitewater was a sweetheart deal in which McDougal, who later headed a buccaneering S&L, made most of the payments in return for . . . just what, exactly? White House aides insisted that the Clintons had invested enough to claim $22,000 in Whitewater-related interest deductions on their 1978 and 1979 tax returns. But when...
...Holloway is a man who loves women, adores their quiddities, luxuriates ceaselessly in their bodies: toes, earlobes, the whole array of earthly delights. When he is paying what would appear to be monomaniacal attention to one sweetheart, he is, naughty fellow, roistering in memory or anticipation with a flotilla of others. This isn't calculated, callous satyrism; Ira isn't Don Juan. He's helpless, a captive. (He does seem to have a job, but it's in public relations, and doesn't require much attention...
...when Collins signed on as a junior faculty member at Michigan, he had been married for 15 years to his high school sweetheart and had two daughters, ages 14 and 10. Just as important to him, he had become a devout Christian, focusing on what had previously seemed an irrelevant corner of life. While living in the campus town of Ann Arbor, Collins and his wife helped start a Baptist church. The congregation -- and his marriage -- has since dissolved, but his faith, which he describes as basically nondenominational, endures...
...CLINTONS GET SWEETHEART DEALS IN WHITEWATER AND OTHER VENTURES? Quite the opposite, say the President and First Lady; they put $69,000 into Whitewater and lost virtually all that money. But Bill Clinton once put the loss at "at least $25,000," and the Clintons never wrote off any loss at all on their tax returns. A Clinton aide contends that the documentation is too poor to enable them...
...mighty wonderful friend . . . and I need you now more than I ever did before, and I read your column just this minute . . . and I just thought how fortunate I was to have known you and to have your confidence." To Katharine Graham, head of the Washington Post: "Hello, my sweetheart, how are you . . . You know, there's only one thing I dislike about this job . . . that I'm married and I can't ever get to see you. I hear that sweet voice on the telephone . . . and I would like to break out of here and be like...