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...Bergdorf Goodman, pronounces: "If you want to do something new to your wardrobe, you accessorize the leg." Adds Sunny Clark, a buyer for Henri Bendel: "This year there are a jillion different looks for the leg." The re-emergence of the leg results partly from the new, bigger, fuller skirts and dresses that require attention be paid to the underpinnings. Says Fashion Editor Elsa Klensch of Harper's Bazaar: "No doubt of it, the leg has come back as the center of interest. For years we covered them up with pants. Now they're back, and they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Layered Look for Legs | 9/12/1977 | See Source »

Arthur Stupay, a Cleveland broker and former multinational executive who was not at the seminar, offers a fuller defense. Says he: "American businessmen in some ways are more sophisticated in managing foreign operations than the State Department. U.S. businessmen live longer in a country and know the customs and culture more intimately than State Department people." If businessmen do not ask the Government for help when they get into trouble abroad, Stupay adds, it is because "they have contacts that they think are better informed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OPINION: Kissinger's Complaint | 7/11/1977 | See Source »

...Wall Street investment banker with degrees in law, business administration and economics. But Uncle Al, the Kiddies' Pal, as he thinks of himself, is not just living out a childhood fantasy. The owner of Oakland's U.S. Chewing Gum Manufacturing Co. since 1974, he pumps gum like Fuller pumped brushes. "We'll do about $6 million this year," he says happily. "About 1.5 billion gumballs." Early in 1976 Uncle Al became a millionaire. He has jawbreaking novelties such as a nonmelting ice cream cone in 28 flavors, the solid-chicle Pterodactyl...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Hot New Rich | 6/13/1977 | See Source »

...there did remain a need for a fuller, totally accurate account of his life. As Nabokov told Field, "The first biography, no matter what comes after, casts a certain shadow on the others." It is characteristic of Nabokov's precision and fastidiousness that he would like to arrange those shadows. Says Field: "He was defending his life. I was defending my task and my independence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Casting the First Shadow | 6/13/1977 | See Source »

...dimensional people is hopelessly dull, for none of them is developed beyond the most elementary level. Each is introduced, described, and shown taking a path which either intersects or diverges from Gene's travels. No extra attention is given to making these people more memorable by depicting them in fuller detail. Wakefield's choice to eliminate dialogue is an unfortunate one, since some intelligent conversation between these characters might have salvaged the novel, even marginally...

Author: By Judy Bass, | Title: Sluggish Nonsense | 6/1/1977 | See Source »

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