Word: fee
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Chirico's fee was his model, worth $2,145. In ten days he dashed off a picture in which Pegasus, led by a hero in a floating red robe, descends to snort at a gleaming new blue Fiat. Above it, like a vision in the pearly clouds, appears the first Fiat, produced 50 years...
...peddling the byproduct of his work as a $15,000-a-year servant of the people, the Senator had not actually broken any laws. Congressmen often get fees for making speeches and writing magazine articles. Members of Congress are no more limited in moneymaking ventures than other citizens, except that they may not take fees for lobbying or dealing with Government agencies. The rest is up to their moral judgment. McCarthy had raised a question of propriety-and his fancy author's fee was enough to raise eyebrows...
Rogers commented, however, that the reason for abolishing the Laboratory, Library, and Guidance program was in order to prevent a student from being "financially penalized" for taking courses. Under the old system of full program of courses would cost $150 more than the registration fee for research alone...
...down four dollars a month to park his car three-quarters of a mile away, it just wasn't worth it. Mr. Pyne figures a five-minute walk for the distance, reasonable time for a cross-country man; students will probably forego the exercise and the fee and go on parking their cars on the streets...
McDonald has FCC permission to make a three-month test in Chicago this fall of Phonevision (TIME, May 1). His gadget, inexpensively hooked onto a TV set, would enable the home viewer to order movies by telephone, at $1 each, for his living-room screen. The fee, charged on the monthly phone bill, would be split among the movie producer, the TV station and the phone company...