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...objects, filling his 20-room mansion with more art works (his collection includes paintings by Nicolaes Maes, Francisco Goya and Jan Sluyters), and building up millions of dollars in real estate holdings. His undoing began last spring with publicity that the firm of Sotheby-Mak Van Waay would auction part of Menten's art collection in Amsterdam. The same Israeli journalist, Haviv Kanaan, who had been accumulating evidence against Menten for decades, alerted the Dutch press and, once again, the government. The press, led by Hans Knoop, editor of the weekly magazine Accent, and journalists of a television current...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NAZIS: The Collector: Art and the SS | 12/20/1976 | See Source »

...however, it would have been a lot hotter in the pressroom of the Indian Express (circ. 400,000), the flagship of India's largest newspaper chain. Reason: government officials tried a few weeks ago to rip out the paper's air-conditioning system and auction it off to satisfy a disputed tax bill. Only a last-minute court injunction saved Express workers from a daily steam bath...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: A Cold War for Press Freedom | 12/20/1976 | See Source »

...group of Kirkland House juniors ran a call-in auction for a pair of choice seats. "Call in Your Bid," read the signs which they put up all around the University. And there was no dearth of callers, either...

Author: By Richard S. Weisman, | Title: Any extra Tickets? | 11/13/1976 | See Source »

Still, dispirited ranchers continue bringing their cattle to auction each week. As Ron Nelson, a cattleman up from Iowa to look over the South Dakota stock, observed recently in Miller, "If this were the first year of the drought, a lot of these boys would take a loan, buy some hay and hold on. But it's been too bad, too long...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Too Bad, Too Long | 9/20/1976 | See Source »

...Karl Parker, who pronounced Sepham Barn a fake. When The Horse Chestnut Tree appeared in Sotheby's, one of its former consultants, David Gould, wrote to Chairman Peter Wilson expressing doubts about it. But the scandal was finally exposed when Geraldine Norman, the London Times's auction-room correspondent, tracked Keating to his lonely cottage in Dedham. "I have so much contempt for the dealers who prostitute the art of genuine painters," Keating announced, "that I was willing to sell them any old rubbish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Palming Off the Palmers | 9/13/1976 | See Source »

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