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Documents tagged "Simmons"

Found 7 documents with this tag

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033568.txt

The document is an email chain discussing Daryl Cagle's blog posts on Howard Schultz and Jeff Bezos. Key people mentioned include George Krassner, Daniel Dawson, Walli Leff, Danny, Lanny Swerdlow, HARRY SHEARER, Michael Simmons, Lee Quarnstrom, Paul Krassner, Tom Goldberg, Kevin Bright, Jay Levin, Larry Sloman, W&K, and others. The document also includes a cartoon by Cagle about the two-legged Starbucks mermaid logo and its merger with Howard Schultz's company, as well as another cartoon on Jeff Bezos and David Pecker of the National Enquirer.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_033225.txt

The document discusses a comedian named Irwin Corey, who had a long career and performed in various venues such as vaudeville, radio, television, films, Broadway, nightclubs, and Las Vegas showrooms. Paul Krassner shared his experience of being the opening act for Corey and smoking a joint with him backstage. Corey had a humanitarian streak and visited Cuba on a diplomatic mission to lift the embargo on health supplies. The comedian also revealed that he read Nazi hate literature to get in the mood to perform. In 1996, Paul Krassner published a photo of Irwin Corey presenting Fidel Castro with gifts, including pistachio nuts, in his magazine "The Realist".

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031973.txt

In this document, Paul Krassner shares memories of his time as a columnist for Cavalier Magazine and mentions some key people such as Michael Simmons and Lenny Bruce. He highlights the magazine's focus on hiring talented writers like Thomas Pynchon and Philip Roth, and its effort to distinguish itself from Playboy by being seen as slightly hipper and more youthful. Paul also discusses his experience at an auction of items slept on by the Beatles during their first trip to America and his column about Lenny Bruce titled "Lenny the Lawyer".

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029344.txt

The article discusses a case where the heirs of a Texas billionaire used a specific strategy to reduce their estate tax bill by utilizing an alternative valuation date to value the inherited stock. The author finds this approach interesting and wonders if it was suggested by Alan S. Halperin, who is mentioned in the email.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024923.txt

This is an email from George Krassner talking about his experience as a columnist for Cavalier Magazine and how it hired fine scribes like Thomas Pynchon and Philip Roth. He also mentions Playboy, another men's magazine that was published around the same time. He writes about writing a column for Cavalier called "The Naked Emperor" and describes attending an auction of two-inch squares from bedsheets slept on by the Beatles during their first trip to America. His second column was about Lenny Bruce and his legal troubles.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024624.txt

The document discusses the history of student organizations and campus speech at the University, including regulations from 1964 prohibiting advocacy of political causes or candidates and other activities by student organizations at a specific location. The writer also mentions the launch and development of men's magazine Cavalier, which hired notable writers like Thomas Pynchon and Isaac Asimov and paid him $1,000 a month to write a column named "The Naked Emperor" about an auction of Beatles memorabilia. The writer later became known for creating the character Famous Author, who appears in a series of books written under a pseudonym.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024374.txt

Cavalier Magazine was launched by Fawcett Publications in 1952 as a men's magazine aimed at young and hip readers. The magazine hired notable writers such as Thomas Pynchon, Philip Roth, William Saroyan, Isaac Asimov, and Theodore Sturgeon. In the 1960s, the author was invited to write for Cavalier under the column "The Naked Emperor," which covered topics such as auctions of Beatles' hotel linens and the legal troubles of Lenny Bruce.