Word: schueller
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...used to be you could get a job at one of those factories, even without an education, and make a decent living to support your family," says letter carrier Dina Schueller, 33, of Saranac. Now her husband has been laid off from his construction job, and her brother moved to Maryland for work. Like many left-behind Michiganders, she'll be seeing fewer family members this season. "Christmas was always his favorite holiday," she says of her brother. "He was always the first...
Although many consumers know it for skin-care products like Plenitude, L'Oreal had its origins in hair care. In 1907 French chemist Eugene Schueller developed a line of synthetic hair dyes, known as L'Aureale, or Halo, and started selling them to Parisian hair stylists. Almost a century later, Schueller's once tiny company presides over a host of high-profile beauty names such as Lancome and Garnier. The company's top 14 global brands account for more than 90% of its $14.3 billion in consumer sales...
Owen-Jones has the good fortune to run a company that is not entirely beholden to analysts. Because of a complex arrangement, just over half of L'Oreal's stock is controlled through a holding company that includes Nestle and Liliane Bettencourt, Eugene Schueller's only child and--thanks to her L'Oreal stake--one of the wealthiest people in Europe...
...firm. Unhappy with L'Oreal's offer, he sued, making some provocative charges. He says the company forged his resignation from Paravision in order to placate Arab boycotters, a plot engineered by ex-Nazi collaborators like Correze. Fiercely fighting the claims, L'Oreal does concede that its founder, Eugene Schueller, was an anti- Semitic fascist who hired Correze and other ultra-rightists. But that generation no longer runs L'Oreal. Correze, 80 and ailing, is unlikely to visit the U.S. even if he is never placed on the same watch list that bars Austria's Kurt Waldheim...
...between two nations like China and the U.S. is communication, even if it is not all that peaceful." Some panelists feel that whatever the U.S. might have gained in easing tensions with Communist powers was wiped out by the renewal of bombing in North Viet Nam. Insists Mary Ann Schueller of Philadelphia: "Since we bombed Hanoi, the trip was wasted...