Word: suites
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...million-dollar damage suit naming the University and Dean Griswold of the Law School as co-defendants was filed in the Federal District Court in Washington, D.C., Wednesday...
According to the suit, Puente discussed plans for his books with Griswold in 1950. Later, Puente asserted, the Law School announced that it would put out similar tax pamphlets on 30 foreign countries, thus damaging the sale of his books and rendering his unpublished manuscripts "practically valueless...
...twelve peanuts in that little peanut bag for which you pay 10?" Georgia's Forrester replied: "I thought we had come to an understanding with you Brooklyn people that you would pay us 10? a bag for peanuts and we would continue to pay $75 for a $15 suit of clothes." Cried Multer: "No, no! I would not let you do that ... I will get you a $75 suit for less than...
...began, the Austrians, still numbly happy over the promises Chancellor Julius Raab brought back from Moscow (TIME, April 25), were uncontrollably hopeful; the representatives of the U.S.. Britain and France were visibly skeptical. Russia's Ambassador Ivan I. Ilyichev, enwrapped in a baggy brown suit, was briskly ready for business...
When New York Mirror Editor Jack Lait and his Nightclub Columnist Lee Mortimer brought out their untidy, slapdash book, U.S.A. Confidential, they quickly became targets of half a dozen libel suits (TIME, May 19, 1952), based on the character assassination that helped make the book a bestseller. Biggest and most important was brought by Dallas' Neiman-Marcus store, which sued for $7,400,000 because Lait and Mortimer had written: "Some Neiman models are call girls . . . and the Dallas fairy colony is composed of many Neiman dress and millinery designers." Crown Publishers Inc., which published U.S.A. Confidential, promptly decided...