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Tag: ChicagoMotown Was Not AfraidSo many songs, so many lawsuits. As February brings a plethora of romantic tunes to the airwaves and to people’s hearts, a copyright case recalls how one of the most popular Motown creations was alleged to have been plagiarized from another source. When Baby Love was sung by popular “girl group” The Supremes, it became [...] Posted by Katie Dishman on February 14, 2013, under NARA Coast to Coast, NARA Staff Favorites, Research. Rolling into CourtAs Halloween approaches, our thoughts turn to candy — and court cases. A sweet combination of both can be found in Record Group 21, the U.S. District Court, the Northern District of Illinois, Chicago. Civil case number 47C1770 was filed in 1947, when the Life Savers Corporation sued the Curtiss Candy Company for trademark infringement. [...] Posted by Katie Dishman on October 19, 2012, under NARA Coast to Coast, Research. Communications Commission Creates Confrontational and Cacophonic Court Case“The following program is brought to you in living color by CBS.” Wait. That’s not right. But it might have been if the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) had its way back in 1950. The variation of the long-used advertising slogan by the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), first uttered in 1957, may not have been conceived [...] Posted by Katie Dishman on June 22, 2012, under NARA Coast to Coast, Research. Taking the Streets in Chicago: The 1968 Democratic National Convention on HistorypinToday’s post comes from Kristina Maldre, Education Specialist at the National Archives at Chicago. Protestors are planning numerous demonstrations for this week, when world leaders will gather in Chicago for the 2012 NATO Summit. But assembling in the streets of the Windy City to oppose governmental policies is nothing new. This past year the Occupy [...] Posted by Meredith D. (admin) on May 17, 2012, under NARA Coast to Coast, Photographs, Social Media (Web 2.0). NARA Coast to Coast: The Lawsuit of ChampionsWho knew oats could be so powerful? One Midwestern company knew their strength and did whatever it could to protect its interest in the grain and its products. Posted by Katie Dishman on October 31, 2011, under NARA Coast to Coast, Research. No Laugh-In Matter“Sock it to me!” That is, in a way, what happened to Richard Havilland. And he never got to utter that phrase on the television show that made it famous, Rowan & Martin’s Laugh-In. He did, however, fight back and socked Playboy with a lawsuit. The case provides a fascinating look at not only the [...] Posted by Katie Dishman on October 14, 2011, under NARA Coast to Coast, NARA Staff Favorites. NARA Coast to Coast: WWII Homefront and Chicago RadioSeptember 2 is not necessarily a day which will live in infamy; nevertheless it is significant in world history marking the formal end of World War II in 1945 when Japan signed the Instrument of Surrender on the USS Missouri. While the military fought overseas, Americans at home were doing their part with a little [...] Posted by Katie Dishman on September 12, 2011, under NARA Coast to Coast. Money-Making and Public Art-Loving: The Image of ChicagoThe following post is by guest blogger Kristina Maldre of the National Archives at Chicago. Thanks Kristina! Kids slide down the base of the Picasso statue in Chicago. Tourists stare at themselves and the skyline in the surface of “The Bean.” Nine-to-fivers shuffle under the red Calder piece in the Federal Plaza to their offices five days [...] Posted by Dawn on February 7, 2011, under NARA Coast to Coast. |
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