Word: trademarking
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Dates: during 2000-2000
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...part of a continuing effort to delineate what is and what is not an acceptable use of the Harvard name, the University's trademark office has asked Harvard Student Agencies (HSA) to pay the University royalties on its line of Harvard insignia merchandise...
...provost's office started working on the guidelines this past fall, and deans and information technology directors at various schools saw a rough version in February. Officials from Harvard's trademark office, Assistant Provost Daniel D. Moriarty and some members of Harvard's general counsel's office also helped formulate the policy...
Pity the beleaguered U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. Even before last week's announcement by Celera, applications for patents on human genes were pouring in by the thousands. Biotech firms are seeking rights to genes that might control everything from the neurotransmitters in your brain to susceptibility to chronic diseases. The frenzy is rekindling fears that a few corporations will end up controlling a priceless resource...
...image of gay unity that the group aims to foster can be illusory, board members say. The group increasingly has trouble attracting active members and has tempered its trademark outspokenness in recent months to appeal to a wider portion of the gay community at Harvard...
...Wolfe's allegory for masculinity seems a strange choice, however. White, after all, is his signature. At Mansfield's, Wolfe showed up in his sartorial trademark: a white jacket with a white vest, white-striped shirt, white tie, white handkerchief, white slacks and black-trimmed white shoes. His reading glasses, with thick white frames, resembled two Chinese soupspoons with holes in the center, fused together. He looked as though he had raided the closet of Andy Warhol, Truman Capote or maybe Elton John. They are, after all, empty closets these days. One could hardly help asking onesself, "What...