Word: hairdoed
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They recall that in his prepolitical days, he had a consuming ambition to become an actor - and they argue that he has succeeded superbly. They delight in his adventurous hairdo : "Whatever you want to say about him, he doesn't use that greasy kid stuff." And they point to a political trail that has more twists than that of a palsied sidewinder: the Chicago Sun-Times (whose political creature Dirksen is often, and inaccurately, accused of being) once reported that in his 16 years in the House of Representatives, Dirksen changed his mind 62 times on foreign policy matters...
Pianist Starr missed two things while in Russia: a good shampoo and her husband, Pianist Kenneth Amada. "The Russians are a very musical people," said she, "but they don't know beans about handling a bouffant hairdo." Said her husband, to whom she has been married for only three months: "We've spent much too little time together. That's the musical life for you. But if we give some two-piano concerts, perhaps we'll see each other a little more often...
...dress featured in the current issue of Mody (meaning "fashions"), a Soviet monthly, was a Moscow original: billowy, not willowy. But the face in the sketch was fetchingly familiar. It ought to be. With arching eyebrows, sweeping lashes and bouffant hairdo, it could have been inspired only by Jacqueline Kennedy...
...Kennedy, never one to be overshadowed, wore a chic Chez Ninon ball gown with a sleek white silk top and a "hot pink" silk skirt. Diamonds glistened in her ears and her hair, which had been whipped into a new coiffure known as "Brioche" and resembling a classical Japanese hairdo more than a French pastry. Before dinner, the two heads of state and their ladies visited young Caroline Kennedy and her baby brother in the White House nursery, and John Jr., 17 months old and apparently an admirer of beauty, burst into tears when they left...
...Stalinist repression. Salisbury does not ignore the millions of sober Communist youngsters who study hard in their schools and universities, or work enthusiastically in factories. But more importantly, said Salisbury, there is rising a "lost generation . . . alienated from Soviet goals and strongly oriented toward anything Western-from a new hairdo to democratic freedoms...