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...called "an innocent eye." Wondered she: "Is that good or bad?" Last week, good or bad, the ex-songstress had her first one-woman show (with proceeds to cerebral-palsy research), sold 34 canvases on opening day to such prominent gallerygoers as Mrs. Laurance Rockefeller. Adele Astaire Douglass, Elizabeth Arden Graham, Mrs. George Baker, Mrs. Winthrop Aldrich and Mrs. Thomas Hitchcock...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: May 5, 1961 | 5/5/1961 | See Source »

...summer), wife of Investment Broker Joseph A. Neff; Lydia Melhado (autumn), wife of Investment Broker Frederick Melhado; and Viscountess de Rosière (winter), Ohio-born wife of French-born Jewelry Sales Executive Viscount Paul de Rosière. Gentle spring: evergreen Actress Joan Fontaine. Commented Cosmetics Entrepreneur Elizabeth Arden from her ringside table at the Plaza Hotel benefit: "We had all forgotten that charity can be such...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Apr. 28, 1961 | 4/28/1961 | See Source »

Fifty students officially founded the John Quincy Adams Society last night. After accepting the proposed constitution virtually as written, the meeting proceeded to the election of officers, choosing James H. Broussard '63, president, and Arden G. Doss '64, vice-president...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Adams Society Established | 4/20/1961 | See Source »

...difficult to guess what they expected beyond the easy, frothy flow of cliches that must always accompany such projects. If businessmen, professional men, and scholars do not have some well-defined purpose to fulfill (as do, say, the members of the American Assembly in their conferences at Arden House), they are useless as an aggregate of truth-seekers. The committee that Henry Wriston has chaired for the last year had no such purpose; it was a committee on goals that had the distasteful task of operating completely without them...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Committee Without Goals | 12/7/1960 | See Source »

...myself, much less to you, what I was spending"), but said she had given them up when a skin specialist assured her that nothing, but nothing, beats common soap. This little white lie (in private fact, she still dabs on assorted costly ointments, pays 75? a cake for Elizabeth Arden soap) had its purpose. It was Sylvia's way of backing into a survey of the billion-dollar cosmetic industry so stuporously dull that few readers would have bothered to read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Sylvia & You | 11/28/1960 | See Source »

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