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...American marriages a year. Allowed to stand in much of the U.S., the divorces required the fleeting appearance of only one spouse, while the other merely agreed in writing. Juárez was so renowned that it attracted charter flights made up entirely of divorce seekers who flew in wed and flew out unwed all in less than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: Demise of the Quickie Divorce | 11/16/1970 | See Source »

...their black hats. Here they are unseen Eastern accountants, identified as bad because they call money "capital." The banks have taken over one of the last of the big spreads, and Monte and Chet hire on for want of more respectable work. Chet eventually gives it all up to wed the hardware-store widow, but Monte won't relinquish his ways even for the golden-hearted, dross-tongued whore (Jeanne Moreau) he loves. By the time the film ends, just about everyone has been killed off except Marvin and Director Wil liam Fraker, who might well have been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Hawg-Tied and Saddle Sore | 10/26/1970 | See Source »

Greek Shipowner Stavros Niarchos and his wife Eugenie were having late dinner in their home on the heavily wooded islet of Spetsopoula, which sits in the Aegean, 56 helicopter miles from Athens. During dinner, Niarchos placed a telephone call to Charlotte Ford in Paris. He was wed briefly to Charlotte in 1965 before returning to Eugenie, his wife of 22 years who had borne him four children. Niarchos wanted Charlotte to send their four-year-old daughter, Elena, to Spetsopoula for a visit, as she had done the year before. After some discussion, Charlotte agreed, and there is some speculation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Greece: The Spetsopoula Incident | 8/31/1970 | See Source »

Diana's solo act does, at last, allow her the leisure to enjoy things material. She owns a Rolls-Royce (a gift from the thrice-wed Gordy) and a new home in Beverly Hills. "I have clothes for every mood," she boasts. Her collection ranges from dungarees and bathing suits to "very classy suits for traveling or teas." Her aim, naturally, is to be an actress. Doris Day advised her that it was not necessary to study acting, and Diana says, "If Jim Brown can do it, I can do it-whatever he's doing." She is especially...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Baby, Baby, Where Did Diana Go? | 8/17/1970 | See Source »

...Indian Sign, Poet James Dickey's Deliverance (TIME, April 20). A few more deal with a subject successfully chosen to titillate advance publicity. Felice Gordon, for instance, in The Pleasure Principle looks into the bed and bored accommodations of a beautiful and renowned American widow now wed to a Greek shipping magnate. Attractive Lois Gould, widow of a New York newspaperman, has created that city's most piquant putative roman a clef in years by writing her first novel about the wife of a New York art director who discovers that most of her girl friends loved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Q. Can the U.S. Absorb 130 First Novelists a Year? A. No. | 6/29/1970 | See Source »

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