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...sunny California, some of the world's sharpest auto salesmen provide a deal of shade. Last week the shadiest of them all was popped into the cooler. Convicted on charges of conspiracy, grand theft and forgery, Auto Dealer Henry J. Caruso-billed as "the greatest" in his radio and TV singing commercials-was packed off to jail for a year, fined $10,000, and enjoined for the next ten years from entering any business in which he would be selling to the public. After Caruso, wary Californians agreed, the public needed a ten-year respite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Greatest | 2/3/1958 | See Source »

...young, hot-eyed Benito Mussolini stared out of U.S. TV screens this week and spoke in accented English: "I salute the great American people." CBS conjured up the Duce's shade in Mussolini, a fast-moving half hour on Twentieth Century galvanized by rare images of the living past. Viewers caught glimpses they had half forgotten or never seen before: newborn Fascist babies squirming wholesale on a nursery table; the bare-chested dictator on a ski slope; his mistress, Claretta Petacci, in a silken boudoir; an anonymous GI mugging in victory from the famous balcony of the Palazzo Venezia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: The Celluloid Sleuths | 12/23/1957 | See Source »

...thinkers on the troubles of our times have pointed out a peril involved in scientific animal experimentation which does not clearly face the meaning of the physical torture it is based upon, and that such residual indifference to suffering is a breeder for the gas chamber and human lamp-shade...

Author: By Mary C. Rice, | Title: MORAL ISSUE | 11/16/1957 | See Source »

Anyone who searched the U.S. economy last week could find evidence to support almost every shade of opinion, from rose to deepening blue. The statistics, as they have been for months, were mixed. Yet an increasing number of businessmen-and many more Wall Streeters-seemed to be looking only at the dark spots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: Mutes in the Trumpet | 11/11/1957 | See Source »

...judge called her "the Joan of Arc of her profession." The Trib promptly staked her out on Page One in a blaze of pictures, plastered most of an inside page with sidebars, ran a fat lead editorial sounding the tocsin of the freedom, of the press and invoking the shade of Woodrow Wilson. The Trib's young (32) Editor-Publisher Ogden R. ("Brownie") Reid vowed that the paper would carry the case to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. Said Columnist Torre: "I feel like Dred Scott today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Joan of Arc at the Trib | 10/28/1957 | See Source »

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