Word: bachelors
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...capital. Says she: "It's a frontier town again, and that's Washington at its best." Still another potential survivor is blonde Page Lee Hufty, 29, a member of an old moneyed family, who paints, rides, plays tennis and is one of the most eligible bachelor girls in town. She finds the Carter people to be "fairly young, gregarious and open-I hope they stay that...
...stop him on the street to rehash it. His office is on Fifth Avenue, but his favorite headquarters is Elaine's Restaurant, Manhattan's top celebrity hangout. He often winds up his 15-hour days-usually early in the morning-at his fourth-floor walk-up bachelor's pad on Manhattan's East Side with a diet cola and a Stouffer's short-ribs-of-beef dinner. He cooks four at a time and eats them cold out of the refrigerator...
...farmhouse upstate, Rupert keeps trim by riding, skiing, swimming (40 laps in his pool) and thrashing around on a tennis court. He once challenged a group of his editors to play him, without their tennis shoes. "We have an old-fashioned marriage," says Anna, who is studying for a bachelor's degree at New York's Fordham University. "He's good with the children, although he's not a wrestly daddy. He's afraid he'll rumple...
Sixth child of a struggling Kentucky coal-mine operator, Kreps earned a bachelor's degree at Berea College, which described itself as a "selfhelp" school for the poverty-stricken coal-mining region. "The spirit of the place," she recalls, "was one of independence, self-reliance, high-level integrity and academic excellence. It made a deeper impression on me than did my childhood." Kreps took her advanced degrees in economics at Duke. There she met her husband Clifton, now a professor of banking at the nearby University of North Carolina. The couple, married for 32 years, frequently entertain students...
After earning his bachelor's and law degrees at the University of Nebraska, young Ted headed for Washington. Taking a job on Capitol Hill, he was so promising that he soon caught John Kennedy's eye and became his administrative assistant. The two hit it off, sharing similar ideas and temperaments. As Sorensen put it, "Both of us have a certain reserve, a certain difficulty giving ourselves to people." But Sorensen had no trouble devoting himself wholeheartedly to Kennedy's service...