Word: miller
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Charles Bennett 1G, and Hedy Miller, a 22-year-old Boston nurse, escaped unharmed yesterday from a Schroder's Cave accident in Dolegville, N.Y., in which James Mitchell, 23, of Winthrop, died...
...suit was filed in Sacramento against Crawford Miller, an insurance investigator and landlord who seeks to evict Clifton Hill and his family from their $86-a-month apartment solely because he wants "to rent said premises to members of the Caucasian race." Defendant Miller says the new amendment gives him that right. Plaintiff Hill emphatically disagrees, citing the equal-protection clause of the U.S. Constitution's 14th Amendment...
...court refused to support Landlord Miller, said Judge Gallagher, it would violate Miller's private property rights under the due-process clause of the 14th Amendment. As for the new state amendment, Gallagher said it simply resumes California's former "neutrality in these matters" and restores to private property owners "an absolute freedom of choice in the disposition of their private property...
...Among them are such comic writers as Bruce Jay Friedman and Joseph Heller, both of whose first novels were bestsellers. They also include such gifted but less widely read novelists as John Barth and James Purdy; they are perhaps best known for names like Terry Southern, Warren Miller and J. P. Donleavy...
...savagely raked in Ken Kesey's brilliant, creepy first novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Television got its lumps in Golk, Richard G. Stern's novel about a TV show that puts unsuspecting people on camera. The Negro problem was the subject of Warren Miller's recent The Siege of Harlem, a sly, timely pseudo history of how Harlem became a separate nation. Some writers, of course, take up black humor for just one novel, like Kesey or Stern, and then go on to other things. But other novelists who are not themselves black...