Word: lawyerly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...business going to offer this kind of set-up, this kind of a reward-in-centive structure? It seems obvious that the academic student will turn to the more "academic" professions: professor, researcher, scientist, lawyer--professions which involve freedom of intellectual activity. Furthermore, students are under the impression that business does not offer such intellectual freedom. The academically talented say they will be too constrained, too limited by the management level they are on, too limited to the manipulation of the great technocracy; business involves too much application and too little creative thinking. They feel that the role of manager...
...Faculty Coordinator of the Harvard Business School Summer Internship Program this summer, calls the problem of the role of the businessman. This concept seems to encompass both the intellectual and societal hang-ups of undergraduates in regard to business. The role of the doctor or the role of the lawyer are academically and socially defined and accepted. Most undergraduates today neither understand nor accept the concept of the role of the businessman. It has for too long been ambiguous. The role of the professional manager can now be well defined by the graduate business school, but is still quite confusing...
...NEWS SPECIAL: THE TRIAL LAWYER (CBS, 10-11 p.m.). Four of America's most successful attorneys for the defense-. Lee Bailey, Edward Bennett Williams, Melvin Belli and Percy Foreman-discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the trial-by-jury system...
Branigin, 65, may not have his rivals' national reputation, but he is perfectly cast in the role of defender against those he calls the "outlanders." A prosperous corporation lawyer before running for Governor in 1964, he won by 263,000 votes, the largest plurality in the state's history. He has since burnished his popularity by keeping spending down...
...with speaking against the war and the draft, and not with committing substantive crimes. "So long as they are discussing public matters, no matter how vigorously, and so long as they do not reach incitement (to break the law), they are protected," said William P. Homans Jr., Ferber's lawyer...