Word: owners
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Newhouse, the settlement that came at the cost of $4,000,000 will give him a 17-month head start as undisputed owner of his new papers. To Springfield staffers, it now means little, if anything. They are already reconciled to the brash outsider. "We have had a lot of opportunity to talk with employees in other Newhouse operations," says one editor, "and we haven't found anything to get alarmed about...
...life more livable for the tenants." All that the five families in the building had to do was to hand their rent over to King instead of the landlord, the Negro leader explained, and he would use it to renovate the place and turn the balance over to the owner. Conceding that this might be considered "supralegal," King contended: "We aren't dealing with the legality of it. We are dealing with the morality...
...years the improbable gastronome had been dropping into the late Henri Soule's Le Pavilion restaurant whenever he came to Manhattan. When he did so, recalled an aide to the eatery's famed owner, "M. Soule saw to it that there was a bottle of Romance Conti at his table. Two of his favorite dishes are poulet mascotte and filet tie boeuf pe-rigourdinc." And so in Soule's will, filed for probate in Manhattan-and leaving the bulk of his estate of more than $1,000,000, including proceeds from the eventual sale of Le Pavilion...
...most of the accident cases out of over worked courts. Like workmen's compensation insurance, the professors' "basic protection plan" permits recovery without proof of fault. As worked out in a new book, Basic Protection for the Traffic Victim (Little, Brown; $13.50), the plan requires every car owner to carry a policy that would pay all of a victim's out-of-pocket costs-up to $10,000. These costs would include hospital and medical bills as well as 90% of lost wages (on the theory that 100% payment would encourage malingering), and would be paid...
...haggle some more on money. On the other two issues, they feel that they cannot afford to yield. No one gets more than a one-year contract in baseball, largely because it is impossible to know how long any player will last. As for the tandem negotiating, Dodgers Owner Walter O'Malley says...