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...that sounded authentic, Hunt said that he then used a White House Xerox machine, a razor blade and a typewriter. Because it lacked the proper type face, however, he knew it would not stand careful scrutiny. He and Colson, Hunt testified, thereupon tried to convince a LIFE correspondent, William Lambert, that the cable was genuine. Lambert was impressed at first but later became doubtful and never wrote about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INVESTIGATIONS: The Inquest Begins: Getting Closer to Nixon | 5/21/1973 | See Source »

...individuals. The hero (Len Cariou) is a prosperous lawyer somewhat baffled and buffeted by middle age. Widowed, he has attempted to regain his lost youth by marrying a child bride (Victoria Mallory) who, after eleven months, is still skittishly virginal. Completing the household is Cariou's son (Mark Lambert) who has a jittery case of postadolescent puritanical guilt and an unholy crush on his stepmother. He, in turn, is pursued by a lusty wench of a maid (D. Jamin-Bartlett) who believes that sex is an act rather than a word...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Valse Triste | 3/12/1973 | See Source »

...antipollution forces would be entitled to free time to rebut auto-company commercials. The FTC charged four big food companies (Kellogg, General Foods, General Mills and Quaker Oats) with monopolizing the breakfast cereal market, and tried to block a merger between two large drug firms (Parke-Davis and Warner-Lambert). Last month the agency accused Xerox of illegally muscling competition from the $1.7 billion copier market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONSUMERISM: Shift at the FTC | 1/22/1973 | See Source »

Last June, apparently on a wild impulse, David J. Hanley, 30, dashed out of a cocktail lounge near St. Louis' Lambert Airport. He got into his 1972 Cadillac convertible and crashed it into an American Airlines 727 jet airliner in a foolhardy attempt to stop a skyjacking then in progress. The skyjacker and his hostage crew merely switched to another plane and took off with $502,500 in ransom (he parachuted safely, but was later arrested). Even so, Hanley was seen by some as a courageous citizen acting boldly to stop a crime...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Expensive Samaritanism | 10/2/1972 | See Source »

...even some Olympic officials knew the name of the coach of the U.S. water-polo team, and it was days before Witteman tracked down Art Lambert at DeAnza College in Cupertino, Calif. The rowing coach, Harry Parker of Harvard, was reached on a phone in the Dartmouth College boathouse. "I have learned more about the Olympics in the past month," says Witteman, "than I ever dreamed I would know...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Aug. 7, 1972 | 8/7/1972 | See Source »

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