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Died. Lewis Gruber, 75, tobacco executive; in Manhattan. A crack salesman who smoked three to four packs of cigarettes a day, Gruber joined the tobacco firm of P. Lorillard Co. in 1924, became president in 1956. His campaign promoting the Micronite filter helped propel Kent domestic sales from 3.4 billion to 36 billion in two years. Puffing at doctors' warnings, Lorillard advertising claimed "We're Tobacco Men, Not Medicine Men," prescribed Old Gold cigarettes (another company product) "For a Treat Instead of a Treatment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Apr. 19, 1971 | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

...course, sees the connection between their ambitions and the Countess' wish to re-open her decayed ancestral fief, Helmut marries the heiress, though he and his bride aspire only to sexual bliss with Conrad. Conrad himself mercy awaits the chance to murder the heiress and her parents, to propel him openly into prominence and wealth as savior of the Ornstein dynasty. Barbarian blood, as the old historical axiom goes, refreshes the withered, in-bred stock of effete aristocrats. In fairy-tale fashion, all who have survived live happily ever after...

Author: By James M. Lewis, | Title: The Moviegoer Something for Everyone At the Harvard Square Theatre through Tuesday | 11/5/1970 | See Source »

...students at Los Angeles' Loyola University, the imitation of W. C. Fields in My Little Chickadee seemed uncannily exact. And why not? The imitator was W.C.'s grandson Ronald, 20, who was using the act to propel his campaign for student-body president. He even paraphrased parts of his grandfather's 1940 book, Fields for President. Sample: "Many of you have asked why I am running for President when I already have a promising future as a veterinarian." Unlike Grandpa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Jun. 1, 1970 | 6/1/1970 | See Source »

...idea of starting an unprovoked nuclear war themselves. As Sovietologist Raymond L. Garthoff, now an adviser to the U.S. delegation at SALT, pointed out in his 1966 book, Soviet Military Policy: "Communist doctrine does inject unusually strong hostility and suspicion into Soviet policymaking, but Marxism-Leninism does not propel the Soviet Union blindly toward war or the witting assumption of great risks." Communist doctrine does, however, impel them toward a global competition short of direct U.S.-Soviet warfare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Moscow's Military Machine: The Best of Everything | 5/4/1970 | See Source »

...lucky shots, but none was so amazing as a three-iron that he hit on the tenth hole. After hooking his drive on the 390-yard dogleg to the left. Smallnick could not even see the green for the trees. The smart Engineer then devised a plan which would propel his ball on a flight pattern like that of a boomerang. He would hook the ball around the trees...

Author: By Martin R. Garay iii, | Title: Golfers Take Boston Crown | 4/22/1970 | See Source »

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