Word: client
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Upon entering the bureau office in Gannett House, the prospective client gave her name and address to the secretary at the reception desk. The secretary requested the 25-cent registration fee, which each client pays if able. Then the woman was introduced to one of the students on duty that day, and was shown to a conference room for the initial consultation session...
...with any new client, the first task was to determine whether the woman was financially eligible for the free services of the bureau. Eligibility is based on income, number of dependents, and pressing financial obligations. If the counsel decides that an applicant can afford professional legal advice, he suggests lawyers in the Boston area who are on the bureau's referral list...
With the go-ahead from the welfare agency, the client signed the necessary forms, and the papers were filed in court. Except in cases of extreme poverty, the client pays the court costs...
...trial, the law student appeared in court with the client, an identifying witness, and a corroborating witness. The student pleaded the case before the court. Divorce was granted, and the bureau received a copy of the decree for the client...
...agency (1956 billings: $25.8 .million). Before he shifted completely to BBDO, fourth-biggest agency (1956 billings: $194.5 million), Revson took the precaution of siphoning off part of his business to three smaller firms. But the big problems flowed into BBDO along with Revson. The biggest was the fact that Client Revson demanded top-quality advertising and simply worked too hard for the admen to keep up. The weary admen began agreeing with Revson's bad ideas as well as his good ones in order to crawl home to the wife and kiddies. His brand of rugged individualism overpowered those...