Word: retainers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...royalty arrangement meanwhile has lasted despite efforts to break it. Warner-Lambert, the company that' evolved from the Lamberts' firm, last tried to break the arrangement in 1960 and was turned down flatly by a federal appeals court. Lawrence's heirs, who still retain about three-eighths of the royalties, continue to benefit as a result, and so do assignees of one of the most remarkable transactions in U.S. business history. Warner-Lambert this year, on sales of Listerine worth $50 million or more, will pay out about $4,000,000 in royalties...
...athlete at Harvard is required to participate in a sport to retain his scholarship, he added...
...Pillow. Nevertheless, the tradition-minded House may prove reluctant to refuse Powell his seat. Only some half a dozen members or members-elect have been excluded since the Civil War (other than those kept out because of contested elections), and some have been allowed to retain their seats even while in jail. Many Congressmen believe that keeping a member out really punishes his constituents by depriving them of a voice, and Powell's velvety, bourbon-cured baritone is clearly the voice that pleases Harlem's voters. In November, though aware of his defiance of the courts, they gave...
Handlin's argument misses a major point. The University is inextricably involved in student deferments--the Administration notifies local draft boards of students' "full-time" status and "good standing"; the Faculty issues grades that may determine whether a student can retain his deferment. True, there is a political dimension to the deferments, one that will hardly be missed when a Presidential Advisory Commission reports on the Selective Service next month and when new draft legislation comes before Congress later next year. But the two factors--political and educational--cannot be separated, and the Faculty should not have ignored a problem...
...party needed an appealing new image, they deposed bumbling Charlie Halleck of Indiana and elevated then 51-year-old Ford. But the victory was diluted only a few days later when the Republican congressmen ignored Ford's support of Peter F. B. Frelinghuysen of New Jersey, and voted to retain Leslie C. Arends of Illinois as minority whip. Ford, facing a party bitterly divided on issues of age and ideology, appealed for peace in the language he knew best. Every one of the 140 Republicans in the House "will be a first string player,' he promised. "Nobody is going...