Word: stauffer
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...flat broke," she told a Los Angeles court. It was a little hard to believe coming from the woman who dined ecstatically off solid-gold plates during her heyday. Just the same, Hedwig Eva Maria Kiesler Mandl Markey Loder Stauffer Lee Boies, better known as Hedy Lamarr, 50, insists that it is true. And so she is asking $3,510 temporary monthly alimony in a divorce suit she has filed against her sixth husband, Los Angeles Attorney Lewis W. Boies Jr., 44. Her daughter, Denise Hedy Lee, 20, hopes for a different kind of life. A sophomore at the University...
...Eberhart and Richmond Lattimore. The book was long out of print when Lambuth died in 1948, but old grads treasured old copies, and not long ago Adman S. Heagan Bayles ('33) lovingly printed a new edition of 1,000 to police the prose at his Manhattan agency, Sullivan, Stauffer, Colwell & Bayles. This fall, courtesy of the ad agency rather than the English department, the Dartmouth business school joyfully revived The Golden Book...
...Justice Department's new weapons have become powerful deterrents even when not being used. "When we see a merger possibility that we think we're going to be attacked on, we just forget it," says Executive Vice President Gene Trefethen of Kaiser Industries. Stauffer Chemical dropped its plans to buy American Viscose Corp. when the trustbusters showed interest. "It's enormously expensive to defend an antitrust charge," notes Moses Lasky, a San Francisco antitrust lawyer. "Just to have one of them brought against you is extremely serious financially...
Died. Bernard Hamilton Stauffer, 63, founder of Stauffer Laboratories, and developer (in 1938) of the first big-time reducing machines, who parleyed his jiggling "Magic Couches" into a nationwide chain of 250 franchised salons before the Federal Trade Commission charged in 1960 that his machines "were of no value in reducing weight," after which business suffered a sharp decline; of a heart attack; in San Gabriel, Calif...
...Stauffer's article, accompanied by eight pages of intriguing photographs, describes the life of the Quashqai nomads of Iran and the government's intermittent efforts at forcing them to settle. He fails, however, to explain the reason for the present Shah's opposition to the nomads and sounds much too much like a travelogue. Safran, on the other hand, in the most interesting article in the issue, discusses the Histradrut, an Israeli combination trade union and industrial empire. He describes its formation, in the days before the organization of the state of Israel, as an organization to include "all workers...