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...Swiss divorce, Burton sailed from Manhattan to Europe last week accompanied by Ellen Rossen, 27, daughter of late Film Director Robert Rossen. Ellen and Burton got to know each other during the making of Daddy's epic Alexander the Great, released in 1956. Other meetings followed. Apparently Teen-Ager Ellen was a welcome backstage visitor when Dick starred in Camelot on Broadway in the early '60s. With Liz gone, Ellen has told friends, Dick really needs someone to talk to. So a couple of days before he was due to sail, Ellen, who is a writer-producer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jul. 8, 1974 | 7/8/1974 | See Source »

...longer the Iowa teen-ager who starred as St. Joan, Jean Seberg, 35, is a film director. Now, she and her third husband, aspiring Director Dennis Berry, 29, live in bourgeois comfort on Paris' Left Bank patronizing young film makers and actors. One of them, Jean-François Ferriol, "feels he is a reincarnation of Billy the Kid," said Jean, who thereupon sat down and wrote a two-reeler called Ballad for the Kid. The script calls for an encounter between Billy, played by Ferriol, and a Hollywood star from the '30s, played by Jean. "When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jul. 1, 1974 | 7/1/1974 | See Source »

Hatchet Man. Indeed, Colson's entire career has been marked by the kind of unrelenting ambition that led him to become the White House hatchet man. As a teen-ager in Boston, he defiantly rejected a full scholarship at Harvard as he thought it too radical a university and because officials there told him, "No one has ever turned down a full scholarship at Harvard." He went to Brown instead. A man in a hurry, he became, at 22, the youngest company commander in the Marines. He married young and had three children (that marriage ended in divorce...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: The Man Who Converted to Softball | 6/17/1974 | See Source »

...woman on the pilgrimage grasped the chain-link fence and recalled with tears in her eyes how she had done the same thing as a girl 30 years before, wishing she were on the other side. Another woman, Nancy Shibata, 43, was a teen-ager at Tule Lake, where she met her future husband. "I was young enough so that I didn't feel bitter," she remembers. Today the barbed wire causes more wonder than woe. "To look at it after you're out-I said, 'Gee, we stayed in a place like that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AMERICAN SCENE: Tule Lake 30 Years Later | 6/10/1974 | See Source »

...last potentially employable person has a job, on the theory that the unemployed would produce enough goods and services to eliminate supply shortages. That idea is superficially attractive but would not work; labor markets just do not operate that way. Long before the last black woman or teen-ager found a job, severe shortages of skilled workers and the expense of hiring the unskilled would drastically lower productivity and cause totally unacceptable inflation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INFLATION: Seeking Antidotes to a Global Plague | 4/8/1974 | See Source »

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