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...diamond, which substantially improves heat conduction and thus has many important applications for lasers, optics, electronics and communication, has pitted the scholar, Russell Seitz, and Harvard professors against the corporate giant...

Author: By June Shih, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Scholar, Company Battle Over Patent | 4/24/1992 | See Source »

Take the case of Scott. The longtime message from ITT had been to "do O.K. and stay out of trouble," recalls Tadd Seitz, now president of O.M. Scott & Sons of Marysville, Ohio. "There was no great push for excellence." But after Seitz and his fellow managers bought the unit in 1986 for $133 million, they promptly came out with several new products that ITT executives had blocked. Among them: Winterizer, a compound that protects lawns during the winter. ITT management, Seitz says, had feared that Winterizer might sabotage sales of other Scott lawn-care products. But it has become...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When Managers Are Owners | 11/7/1988 | See Source »

...Baseball's current system of free agency began in 1975, when arbitrator Peter Seitz allowed two pitchers to play out their options and bargain with the teams of their choice. Two points for knowing...

Author: By David L. Yermack, | Title: The 1984 Sports Cube Baseball Quiz | 4/3/1984 | See Source »

...reveals a bleak gray back wall and a spectral frieze of figures who may be inmates of a prison or an asylum. Later they will coalesce into a band of Greek Furies or chalk-faced exorcists, hissing and poking little white crosses at the unrepentant libertine Don Juan (John Seitz). At times, blistering white light rakes the audience as if the entire universe of man merited a third-degree grilling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Bold Hand at the Guthrie's Helm | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

...witness to Don Juan's exploits, and a teeming flagon of comic relief, is his servant Sganarelle (Roy Brocksmith). He makes cowardice an art form. Brocksmith has some of the elephantine grace of Zero Mostel. Seitz's Don Juan is a triumph of stylized scorn. He scuttles about the stage crab-fashion. He gazes into a mirror as if to blot out the scum of the earth. Even in wooing, he masks any show of passion. He is, for certain, a radical Don Juan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Bold Hand at the Guthrie's Helm | 7/27/1981 | See Source »

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