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Word: pinching (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Pinch? The other publisher accused of crossing the line is Playboy's Hugh M. Hefner, 37, who was asleep in his humble 40-room pad on Chicago's North Side one afternoon earlier this month when four men from the vice squad came calling. A brass plaque on the front door carries the Latin legend "Si non oscillas noli tintinnare"-"If you don't swing, don't ring"-but the cops rang anyway and swung Hefner off to be booked on charges of publishing and selling an obscene magazine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Two Definitions of Obscenity | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

...overripe Actress Jayne Mansfield. In bed and bubblebath, Jayne revealed everything except what an un-Sanforized G string might conceal. But there was nothing particularly unusual about that, for scores of equally nude "playmates" have appeared in the magazine in its 9½-year history. Why the pinch now? "Jayne has more than most," says Hefner by way of explanation. "She makes people nervous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Two Definitions of Obscenity | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

...incompetence, the avatar of their hopes. An itinerant athlete, cast off most recently by the Yanks, he was picked up by the scavengers fabricating a 1962 National League team for New York. He endeared himself by providing some of the season's few heroic moments (ninth-inning, game-winning, pinch-hit home runs) and some of the many ghastly ones (a long drive good for a triple, except that Marv missed both first and second base...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Marvelous Marv | 5/16/1963 | See Source »

...though. Mike Patrick picked up his second hit of the game, beating out a long throw from short to first; but he was out at second on a fielder's choice when captain Dick Diehi knocked the ball down the third-base line. Jim Mullen then came in to pinch-hit for third-base Lee Sargent who had gone hitless. Mullen went hit less, striking...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Crusaders Beat Nine, 2-1, On Ninth-Inning Home Run Through Shortstop's Legs | 5/9/1963 | See Source »

...showed up on the paychecks too. General Motors Chairman Frederic Garrett Donner, 60, set an alltime automotive industry record in 1962 by earning $791,475-$201,475 in salary and directors' fees, a cash bonus of $442,500 to be collected over five years to soften the tax pinch, and $147,500 in "contingent credit"-the bonus value of G.M. stock options he was granted for 1962. The mathematics might seem a little complicated to anyone less skilled in figures than Donner, but G.M. had a tax-conscious explanation: Donner theoretically would have only $109,410 left after taxes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Executives: Detroit's Highest Tribute | 5/3/1963 | See Source »

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