Cowboy in a Continental Suit
In December 1961, when Marty had been at Columbia for ten years, Don Law negotiated a contract change from a two-year to a ten-year term. “I made so much money back in 1959, ’60, ’61, and ’62, and I didn’t even have a CPA,” Marty told an interviewer in 1981. “By the time I got one, it was already to...
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Published in | Twentieth Century Drifter p. 87 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Book Chapter |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
University of Illinois Press
07.02.2012
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | In December 1961, when Marty had been at Columbia for ten years, Don Law negotiated a contract change from a two-year to a ten-year term. “I made so much money back in 1959, ’60, ’61, and ’62, and I didn’t even have a CPA,” Marty told an interviewer in 1981. “By the time I got one, it was already too late. I’d spent a whole lot of my money and a whole lot of Uncle Sam’s. I had an income tax problem for eight or nine years.” To put the era in perspective, a 1964 Ford Mustang sold for $2,368.¹ |
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ISBN: | 0252036328 9780252036323 |