Word: sue
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...when Michael Apted and Gordon McDougall, two researchers for the Granada TV public affairs show World in Action, selected them to appear in a 40-min. documentary called Seven Up!, directed by Paul Almond. The kids were chosen to represent English classes and regions: Jackie, Lynn and Sue from a London council estate, John, Andrew and Charles from a Kensington boarding school, Paul and Simon (originally spelled Symon) from a charity home, Neil and Peter from a Liverpool suburb, Suzy from a titled family, Nicholas from the Yorkshire dales, rough-and-tumble Tony from the East End, ethereal Bruce from...
...Jackie, who has rheumatoid arthritis, was married and divorced is now raising a son. Sue, another single mother, is doing the same. Lynn worked as a children's librarian out of a mobile van; she now helps mentally challenged children and worries about the end of government funding. Suzy, the posh girl, has a successful marriage...
...rhythm dances and four smooth dances. Teams had to choose from both the rhythm category, with dances like the mambo, and the smooth division, which included the waltz and the tango. Contestants chose from similar options in the international division. At this year’s American style contest, Sue S. Chen ’07, and Tomas E. Mikuckis ’07 won first in the foxtrot and Linnea N. Meyer ’07 and Carl Hu, who is unaffiliated with Harvard, took first in the tango for their team. Meyer said that the DanceSport championship...
...involves the denizens of the small Romanian village, Glod—or “mud” in English—which was used as Borat’s hometown. They are planning to sue filmmakers for misrepresenting both them and the deal they were offered—that is, to do what they were told and get filmed doing it. If their claims are true—they have yet to be denied—at no point during the filming process was any effort made to overcome the language barrier and explain what was going...
...Sue Up or Shut Up! A curious case may mean that debt collectors can't threaten to sue their targets unless they really mean...