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...unfairly described as "a graduate student of herself; and Rinsler, a cynical organizer for The Movement. A reader soon finds, though, that all three tend to talk (and think) like a John Leonard review. Here is Rinsler inwardly fulminating at "Melville's bourgeois psychodrama ... Ahab as entrepreneur cum zealot ... Babbitt redux; whale oil poured on troubled waters." Groans Marcy enduring the pain of delivery of her baby: "If this is nature, give me artifice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Signs of Life | 12/31/1973 | See Source »

...Committee to Re-Elect the President, arranged placement of $1,483,000 in SBA grants in order to influence Mexican-American votes for Nixon's reelection. Publicly, the subcommittee revealed that Thomas Regan, head of the SBA office in Richmond, approved a loan to a local entrepreneur, Joseph C. Palumbo. Eleven days earlier, Regan, 44, had married Palumbo's sister. Subcommittee Member Henry Gonzalez, a Texas Democrat, says that congressional investigators are looking into a series of leads that point to possible kickbacks from borrowers, loans made to borrowers in bankruptcy, and loans made before completion of credit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SCANDALS: Minding Small Business | 12/24/1973 | See Source »

...gotta trade in your old car when it can't make the hills," was the way Entrepreneur Chuck Traynor, 34, explained his switch in roles: from exhusband and manager of Linda (Deep Throat) Lovelace to manager of Marilyn (Behind the Green Door) Chambers. "I hope I'm never your old car," giggled Marilyn after she had made a successful New Jersey nightclub debut preparatory to a Las Vegas gig. Meanwhile, Old Car Lovelace was making the grade quite nicely without Chuck. In Cambridge, Mass., she was awarded the Harvard Lampoon's "Wilde Oscar" for risking "worldly damnation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Dec. 17, 1973 | 12/17/1973 | See Source »

...choice was almost inevitable: Kawashima personifies the company almost as much as Honda. Indeed, as a new graduate of a technical high school, he joined Honda the entrepreneur a year before Honda the company was formed. From the start, Kawashima designed motorcycles. In 1959 he was put in charge of Honda's first entries in Grand Prix motorcycle races; the firm picked up the team prize. In 1971 he supervised development of a clean, efficient "stratified charge" auto engine that recently passed U.S. Environmental Protection Agency antipollution tests with flying colors. He will have to draw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Youth Will Be Saved | 12/17/1973 | See Source »

...indeed, unavoidable-commercial pitchmen, touting his much criticized engine-oil additive as the "racer's edge." A little more than a week ago, Granatelli, 50, got the razor's edge when his board of directors abruptly cut him loose and replaced him with John J. Hooker Jr., entrepreneur and sometime politician. Hooker was hand-picked by Derald H. Ruttenberg, chairman of the widely diversified Studebaker-Worthington Inc., which owns a controlling interest in STP. The keenly publicity-conscious Granatelli was almost as incensed by what he believed was inadequate press coverage of his ouster as by the firing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Razor's Edge at STP | 10/15/1973 | See Source »

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