Word: engelhards
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Stiff federal controls on carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon emissions, scheduled to take hold on 1975 model cars, have been a migraine for the automakers. But for Milton Rosenthal, a lawyer who is chief executive of Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corp., Washington's demand for cleaner air could produce a bonanza. Engelhard makes a catalytic converter-a steel cylinder containing a platinum-treated honeycomb structure-that changes some toxic gases into harmless substances. The converter, which costs less than $50, shows strong evidence of enabling the automakers to meet the Environmental Protection Agency standards...
...Though less of a social watering spot, the summer sales at Keeneland boast no less inflated prices. It was there in 1968 that a Norfolk, Va., grocery-chain owner outbid the late Charles Engelhard to set a still unbroken record: $405,000 for a filly, Reine Enchanteur...
Died. Charles W. Engelhard, 54, lavish-living multimillionaire who may have served as the model for the central character in Ian Fleming's novel Goldfinger: of an apparent heart attack: in Boca Grande, Fla. Engelhard ballooned an inheritance of $20 million into an estimated $250 million by his grasp of the potential of precious metals in technology. Equally successful in racing, he spent close to $10 million for top-quality thoroughbreds, had 213 victories in the U.S. in nine years. After his acquaintance Fleming published Goldfinger, Engelhard emphasized the obvious by once showing up for a party...
Nijinsky was bred in Canada by E. P. Taylor and sold to Charles Engelhard for a paltry $81,000. Considering the $150,000 paid for the full brother to Majestic Prince at last weeks' Keeneland yearling sales, Nijinsky was a bargain at any price...