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...three years later. After hitches in the automotive, aircraft and diesel engine manufacturing divisions, he took over Pontiac in 1956 when it was looked on as a car good only for maiden aunts. Knudsen ripped off Pontiac's traditional chrome streaks, pepped up its engine and gave it gimmick features ("wide track." split grille). Result: while other medium-priced cars continued to slide, Pontiac jumped from sixth place in sales into a fight with Rambler for third. Knudsen's move to Chevy will give G.M. kingmakers a chance to measure him with the same yardstick they held...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Autos: Who's What at G.M. | 11/17/1961 | See Source »

Pointed at the Pockets. The newsletter dates from the 15th century, when a family of German financiers named Fugger began circulating a handwritten periodical throughout Middle Europe, thereby giving the gimmick a start. In 1918, when two Philadelphia journalists copied the Fugger example, they pointed the U.S.'s first commercial newsletter toward the pockets of the business community. The Whaley-Eaton American Letter is still published today, although its early success has long since been surpassed by Willard M. Kiplinger...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Up from Fugger | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

Target: The Corrupters (ABC) is another good crime show, dramatizing each week a different area of corruption (waterfront, highway construction). But the rest of the season's prodigious list of new crime shows are mainly 30-caliber bull. NBC's 87th Precinct began with a gimmick (the heroine of the initial episodes was the deaf-mute wife of a police detective) and will undoubtedly end on one-soon. Cain's Hundred (also NBC) has introduced Nicholas Cain (Mark Richman), onetime attorney for the mob, now bent on revenge for the mob murder of his fianc...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The New Season | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

Last May, however, the Islanders gained a local disciple, named Joel Bartley, who was intrigued, thankfully, not by the desperate gimmick of Lionel side-cars, but by the size and quality of their cargo. Mr. Bartley owns the Square's Harvard Spa Luncheonette (in the past little more than a collection of odds and ends: a good part of a stationery shop, half of a grocery more, and just a truncated bit of a soda fountain). Reportedly, Bartley had been dissatisfied with this assortment of leftovers for some time; and a hamburg revival became his means for a change...

Author: By Anthony Hisc, | Title: Mr. Bartley's Burgers | 10/19/1961 | See Source »

GARY: THE GUNS OF NAVARONE. Here, gents, is a war film that has absolutely, yes, absolutely, every gimmick you've ever longed for in a film about G.I.s-plus-Limeys v. them Nazis: U-boat chasing, cliff scaling, partisan risings, grim Yanks, suave Britishers, fanatical Greeks, detestable Germans (one nice German), broads, spies, traitors, explosions -- well, we mean, you name it, this flick has it. It also has Gregory Peck, David Niven, Anthony Quinn plus scores of ex-German general staff members. Evenings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WEEKLY CALENDAR | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

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