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...local poverty by naming the Rev. David Finks, 36, as his "vicar for the urban ministry" in charge of slum problems. Finks has been closely allied with a local Negro protest organization set up by that professional agitator, Saul Alinsky. The group has been demanding that the Eastman Kodak Co. hire 600 Negroes from poverty areas. Despite his appointment of Finks, Sheen has refused to take sides in the quarrel-but he has pointedly urged city business leaders to provide more jobs for the city's Negro ghetto...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Roman Catholics: New Career for Sheen | 2/10/1967 | See Source »

...schools' careful calculation of potential givers, plenty of money still comes in, as Fred J. Lauerman, a University of Minnesota fund director, puts it, "over the transom." Florence Dailey of Rochester, N.Y., a stockholder in Eastman Kodak, left an estate of $19 million to Notre Dame and Georgetown when she died last year. No official from either school had ever met her, and except for the fact that she was a Catholic, no one has yet discovered her special attraction to the two universities. When the University of Redlands began a fund drive in 1965, an alumnus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: The Fine Art of Fund Raising | 1/13/1967 | See Source »

John MacKenzie, an 18-year-old college sophomore from Stockton, Calif., won this year's Kodak Senior Teen-Age Movie Award with an evocative, camera-of-the-absurd put-on that showed two leather-jacketed, switch-bladed punks running up and down crumbling ladders, dancing on rooftops, beating up little kids, being chased by two other hoods, and finally escaping to lean wearily, ecstatically, on one another saying, "Oh, boy! Oh, boy!" National Student Film Award Winner Eric Camiel, 23, evokes the sympathy most Now People feel for the underdog in his Riff '65, a deadpan portrait...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Man Of The Year: The Inheritor | 1/6/1967 | See Source »

...Eastman Kodak Co. took as its new president Louis K. Eilers, 59, a pragmatic, Illinois-born chemist who joined the company in 1934, was elevated to executive vice president three years ago. He replaces William S. Vaughn, 64, an affable, Shakespeare-quoting Rhodes scholar who stays on as chief executive officer, at the same time succeeding Albert K. Chapman, 76, as board chairman. Thanks to its powerhouse drugstore-oriented marketing setup, Kodak accounts for about 80% of the nation's amateur film sales, but its new president means to keep the company expanding into new products. "If you stand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Executives: New Turns | 1/6/1967 | See Source »

...Manhattan-based J. Walter Thompson reported that the 102-year-old company had easily maintained its place at the top. During the past year, the agency added ten domestic accounts, signed up 65 overseas clients, and received enough additional business from blue-chip accounts, which include Ford, Eastman Kodak, Pan American and Kraft Foods, to bring total billings up to $580 million...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Business: J.Walter Global | 12/23/1966 | See Source »

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