Word: client
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...there was nothing in the notes," reports TIME's Karen Tumulty. "The official line is that they had to take this stand because the White House didn't want to set the precedent that any government employee's conversation's with government lawyers would not be covered under attorney-client privilege...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: Lawyers for suspected Saudi terrorist Hani al-Sayegh say their client will cooperate with U.S. officials in their investigation of last year's Dhahran, Saudi Arabia bombing. U.S. officials believe Sayegh drove the look-out car during the June 1996 attack that killed 19 U.S. Airmen and injured 500 others. His extradition today to the U.S. ends a messy diplomatic problem for Canadian authorities who had feared embarrassment at home if Sayegh had been returned to Saudi Arabia, where he likely would have been executed in an area next to a Riyadh mosque unofficially known as "chop-chop...
...places, Richmond, Va. Situated among tobacco warehouses and antiques stores, the Martin Agency was once known for regional work, such as its "Virginia is for lovers" campaign. But recently Martin snagged a $55 million account for Saab cars away from a New York City agency; Coca-Cola is another client. Billings are up 25%, to $355 million. Drawls Mike Hughes, the agency's soft-spoken creative director: "Maybe we're just more wide-eyed and in touch with Middle America right here in Richmond...
Where was Timothy McVeigh on the morning of April 19, 1995? When Stephen Jones, the lead defense attorney in the Oklahoma City bombing case, said in his opening statement that he would prove his client "innocent," he in effect promised the jury he would answer that question. But when the defense rested last week--after calling only 25 witnesses in 3 1/2 days--he had not done so. That failure reflected Jones' fundamental dilemma: he could not offer a story about McVeigh that was an alternative to the one brilliantly told by the government. Of course, the defense...
...pressure led to a shake-up last October, when McDonald's CEO and chairman Michael Quinlan brought in Greenberg. He carries an unlikely pedigree--he was an attorney and accountant at Arthur Young who moved over to his client, McDonald's, as chief financial officer in 1982. He spent lots of time building the financial structures needed for the company's overseas development, but has little experience in burger warfare. That's part of his charm. "I don't feel defensive," he says...