Path: utzoo!utgpu!utstat!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!ukma!husc6!brauer!fry From: fry@brauer.harvard.edu (David Fry) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac Subject: The Beatles sue Apple Message-ID: <1250@husc6.harvard.edu> Date: 23 Feb 89 06:25:25 GMT Sender: news@husc6.harvard.edu Reply-To: fry@brauer.UUCP () Organization: Harvard Math Department Lines: 50 [The following is from the AP newswire service, and is copyrighted by the Associate Press. I hope no one sues me.] APf 02/22 0751 Beatles-Apple Computer Copyright, 1989. The Associated Press. All rights reserved. CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) -- The company representing the disbanded Beatles has sued Apple Computer Inc. challenging its use of the "apple" trademark on some of its products, a newspaper reported. In a lawsuit filed Tuesday in London, Apple Corps Ltd. accused the Silicon Valley computer company of violating a secret 1981 agreement under which the Beatles' company allowed Apple Computer to use the trademark on computer products, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. The agreement retained the right of Apple Corps to use the fruit as a trademark in its music business, and Apple Computer promised not to enter that field, according to the Chronicle, which said a draft copy of the lawsuit was filed in the chancery division of Britain's High Court of Justice. Over the past few years, however, the computer company has developed top-selling new hardware with music synthesizing capabilities, and the Beatles' company claims those products break Apple Computer's promise. The lawsuit asks the court for an injunction to bar Apple Computer from breaching the agreement and seeks unspecified damages, legal fees and interest. The computer company, however, does not believe it is in breach of the agreement, a company spokeswoman said. But company officials would not comment in detail on the suit because they had not yet seen it, she said. Under the agreement reached in November 1981, Apple Computer, founded in 1977, paid the Beatles an unknown amount for the right to keep using its famous apple trademark. Apple Corps had been founded ten years earlier and its activities included releases under the Apple label and a chain of clothing stores. Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of Apple Computer, said on Tuesday he was not aware of the agreement. "I never heard anything about a fuss over the name," said Wozniak, who is no longer associated with Apple Computer. The other co-founder was Steve Jobs and some company histories trace the name to his recollections of working in the Oregon apple country where he became convinced apples are a perfect food. The Beatles pop group broke up in 1970, but the London-based company still represents the busines interests of the three surviving members of the Beatles and the estate of the late John Lennon. Wayne Cooper, a San Francisco lawyer representing the Beatles' company in the dispute, said negotiations between Apple Corps and the computer company broke down at a meeting in London Feb. 13. David Fry fry@huma1.harvard.EDU Department of Mathematics fry@huma1.bitnet Harvard University ...!harvard!huma1!fry Cambridge, MA 02138