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While her husband breasted the politi cal winds in Washington, Jacqueline Ken nedy, 31, deplaned hatless and coatless despite near-freezing cold at New York's La Guardia Airport, spent three gay days on the town. Usually accompanied by her sister, Princess Radziwill, wife of a Polish peer turned London businessman, Jackie looked more elegant each time she came through the revolving doors of the Carlyle Hotel. She supped with Art Dealer Harry Brooks, Fashion Editor Diana Vreeland and such socialite old friends as Mrs. Charles Wrightsman. Her big evening was spent catching the popularly-priced ($3.95 top) City...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Mar. 31, 1961 | 3/31/1961 | See Source »

...anything makes a hatmaker's hair stand on end, it is a man who does not wear a hat-especially if he is the President of the U.S. Last week, fearing the national impact of John F. Kennedy's usual hatlessness, the hat industry set out to rescue the nation's impressionable young men (and itself) from the perils of bareheadedness. In an eye-catching, full-page ad in the New York Times appeared a huge portrait of a beatnik so snaggy-and hatless-that no rising young man could afford to look anything like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Advertising: The Mad Hatters | 1/20/1961 | See Source »

...deference." Wrote the New York Post's liberal Columnist Max Lerner: "Call it a trivial item, but it is not without its meaning: I am speaking of the ritual President-elect Kennedy has established of meeting the press out in the open with each of his Cabinet appointees, hatless and coatless, in sunshine or frost. It could easily become a fetish. But it is one way, and an elective one, of counteracting the world image of Western decadence that the Communists have tried to spread...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Romance | 1/13/1961 | See Source »

...company's day-to-day operations to his three sons-William Jr., Howard and Thomas-but he still keeps a firm hand on the stick. Up before 7 every day, he walks the mile from his small home to the company's offices in Lock Haven. Pa., hatless and overcoatless in all weather. Though he no longer singlehanded lifts Cubs off the ground, a feat he once liked to perform to amaze onlookers, he often pauses at the production line to lend a hand in hoisting a wing into position. He is dead set against liquor, tobacco...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: WILLIAM THOMAS PIPER | 1/13/1961 | See Source »

...Standing hatless under a hot Southern sun last week, Vice President Nixon could wonder whether his brains had been fried to the point of sunstroke. There he stood in the heart of the solid South, in downtown Atlanta's Hurt Park, while a cheering crowd of 45,000 stretched to the eye's limit. There beside him stood Atlanta's grey-thatched Mayor William B. Hartsfield. Democratic to the core but proclaiming the need for a Southern two-party system because "we want to be part of the main stream of American life." Following the mayor came...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE SOUTH: Sunny Day in Dixie | 9/5/1960 | See Source »

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