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...Actress Helen Hayes, 87; Presidential Crony and Crooner Frank Sinatra, 72; Bandleader Lionel Hampton, 75; and Charlton Heston, 64. In keeping with the host city's culinary tastes, the kitchen at Heston's hotel prepared a little something for his arrival. The actor, who played a slave in Ben Hur, entered his room to be greeted by a 3- ft.-high statue of a chariot, sculpted entirely out of tallow...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Republicans: A Big Time in the Big Easy | 8/29/1988 | See Source »

...only 13% of the attorneys surveyed placed ads of any kind; in 1979 the figure was 7%. Ads range in tone from the discreet, almost public-service messages on a Philadelphia classical-music station by Rawle & Henderson, the nation's oldest firm, to the outrageous grabbers of Ken Hur of Madison, Wis., the acknowledged "clown prince of adtorneys." The 300-lb. Hur's most famous TV commercial features him in | bejeweled scuba gear climbing out of a lake and urging those who are "in over their heads" to seek bankruptcy counseling at his Legal Clinic. His next TV offering will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Less Dignity, More Hustle | 6/10/1985 | See Source »

...eight Oscars were not a record; 1959's Ben-Hur set the mark with eleven little gold-plated statues. But it was a triumphant rebound for Forman, 53, the Czechoslovak director whose five awards in 1976 for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest were followed by two commercial disappointments, Hair and Ragtime. "The Academy members are fans of people like Milos who take chances and succeed," says Director Ivan Passer, one of Forman's best friends. "They like Cinderella stories, and they like to make them come true. That was in their power this year, and they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Eight Cheers for the Music Man | 4/8/1985 | See Source »

...eyes that glint like brass buttons, is carrying through hideous plot. Details as thin as his hair, which is combed forward in little bangs. A sure sign of flabby moral fiber and questionable sexual orientation. Only precedent, either thespian or tonsorial, is Frank Thring as Pontius Pilate in Ben-Hur. What he did to Charlton Heston the fellow in the blue blazer is doing to Port Charles, the town in which General Hospital is situated. Mr. Blue Blazer turns out to be Mikkos Cassadine, an amuck plutocrat who means to create "a brave new world." Wants to set the planet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: General Hospital: Critical Case | 9/28/1981 | See Source »

Sometimes ads can succeed beyond a lawyer's wildest dreams. Madison, Wis., Attorney Ken Hur, founder of a low-cost legal clinic, pushed its services with a variety of novel pitches that he says made him "the advertisingest lawyer in America." A hearse, for example, began to rumble along local streets with a printed message promoting $15 wills. Before long, Hur left the clinic and boosted his own hourly charge to $100. He explains, "I had to raise my rates to drive away business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: For Lawyers, the Adman Cometh | 8/24/1981 | See Source »

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