Word: brings
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...clients pay lawyers more happily than illegal immigrants, who live in fear that tomorrow will bring a deportation order. Many aliens look on their own lawyers as part of a threatening system, says Boston Attorney Sharryn Ross. "They don't believe that they can't just pay me more to get them what they want." Immigrants desperately turn to non-lawyers too. Some Latins, including Mexicans, are used to retaining lawyers known as notarios to handle many legal matters at home. Notary publics in the U.S. sometimes take advantage of that confusion and charge fees for useless or misleading advice...
...Perot has indicated a willingness to come up with absolutely incredible sums of money to establish a museum in Dallas. We [at the Peabody] thought we might be able to work with him to set up some adjunct facility and bring our collection into the public eye," said Bruce Heafitz'62, a member of the Peabody's visiting committee, an advisory body to the museum...
...computer magnate, who says "I'm very relaxed" about the fate of his most recent, $72 million scheme to bring a New York museum to Dallas, is renowned for his conservative approach to business and his unprecedented approach to just about everything else...
Earlier this year, he began the now controversial effort to bring New York's Museum of the American Indian to his hometown for $72 million. He offered to build a sprawling, 10-acre complex to display the museum's many collections. It could have been an offer the museum could not refuse, except that New York Mayor Edward I. Koch and Governor Mario M. Cuomo strenuously objected to it, and the Attorney General has promised to oppose the move in court. The fight continues to brew in New York...
...West Germany, officials refused to comment on the Brazilian findings until German forensic experts had returned from Sao Paulo. But the week did bring to light a stream of photographs and documents that seemed to leave little doubt that the 25-year hunt for Mengele was over. The weekly magazine Bunte Illustrierte fleshed out details of the Nazi fugitive's sojourn of roughly 18 years in Brazil with an annotated collection of photographs, supplied by Mengele's 41-year-old son Rolf. In response, the rival weekly Stern ran six pages of photographs chronicling the same period of lonely exile...