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...Paraffin. Elizabeth was a dynamic perfectionist. She could spend months sniffing half a dozen sachets a day in order to find "the most wonderful smell in the world," and insisted on having the bows on packages retied again and again until they reached the exact, proper tilt. Since very few mortals were capable of her degree of dedication, the turnover among Arden employees was a byword in Manhattan career circles; but her exacting policies made great sense to her customers. Inside her salons (now numbering 50 in 33 countries), she similarly tried to perfect the Total Woman-physically, mentally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Women: Hold Fast to Life & Youth | 10/28/1966 | See Source »

Even with Boxing Gloves. Oliva's haphazard style would have horrified Perfectionist Cobb. It terrifies opposing pitchers. "Where are you going to pitch the guy?" asks California's Dean Chance. "Earlier this year I jammed him and he hit the ball into the rightfield seats. So the next time I went outside with him and he hit the ball 350 ft. into the leftfield stands." Twins Manager Sam Mele says, "I think the kid could hit wearing boxing gloves," predicts that Oliva may yet become the first big-leaguer to bat .400 since Ted Williams...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baseball: Three in a Row? | 8/19/1966 | See Source »

...tense situation also prevailed behind the family façade. His father was?and is?an authoritarian, a perfectionist and an unyielding disciplinarian who demanded much of his sons and admitted last week that he was accustomed to beating his wife. In March, Margaret Whitman walked out on him, summoning Charlie from Austin to help her make the break. While his mother was packing her belongings, a Lake Worth police car sat outside the house, called by Charlie presumably because he feared that his father would resort to violence. To be near Charlie, Mrs. Whitman moved to Austin. The youngest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: The Madman in the Tower | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

Heston is simply a professional perfectionist. "Like any art," he says, "acting is imperfectible. That is why acting is more interesting than cutting chicken or selling insurance, which are perfectible, I suppose. Hemingway finally blew his brains out because he realized that for him there were no more chances to try for perfection...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Actors: The Graven Image | 8/12/1966 | See Source »

...would not withdraw from Asia and leave it "to the Americans and Chinese, eyeball to eyeball, to face this thing out." That, said Wilson, "is the surest prescription for a nuclear holocaust I could think of. 'World, go home' is not the posture for this party, and perfectionist solutions, however cathartic and satisfying to their authors, do not bring peace." His performance was effective enough to bring at least temporary peace within his ranks. When it came to a vote, Wilson handily defeated the censure motion, 225 to 54, although 84 abstained or stayed away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Dividing the Critics | 6/24/1966 | See Source »

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