Word: sisterly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...usually counts on three sittings of seven hours. "Of course," said he, "there were always people talking, and he never sat still." Bouché, who finished the portrait in his Manhattan studio, had met the President before. He painted Jackie three years ago, and did a portrait of her sister Lee at that time. He has sketched Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy for Vogue. This was his first portrait of J.F.K...
While the two Presidents discussed affairs of state, Jackie raced through her favorite city in the firm tow of the grandmotherly Mme. de Gaulle. Trailing behind her black bubbletop Citroen were her mother-in-law, Rose Kennedy, her sister, Princess Radziwill, Sister-in-Law Eunice Shriver, and a bevy of lesser ladies in waiting. At the Jeu de Paume Museum, French Minister for Culture André Malraux whisked her past the collection of impressionist paintings in a breakneck 45 minutes. "I have just seen the most beautiful paintings in the world," gasped Jackie as she returned to the rain-splashed street...
...Gore was not only heir to the title of his father. Lord Harlech, a Shropshire landowner and onetime chairman of the Mid land Bank, but also nephew of Tory Kingmaker Lord Salisbury. "We were just young people going around together." says Ormsby-Gore. Then Jack Kennedy's kid sister Kathleen ("Kick") up and married Ormsby-Gore's first cousin, the Marquess of Hartington. The marquess was killed in World War II and Kathleen in a 1948 airplane crash, but the friendship between Jack and David endured...
...Sister Mary Viva, principal of St. John Brebeuf School, knew that all the children lived in that parish. Three of the leukemia victims were attending the school when their illness began; four others were preschool tots with older brothers or sisters in the school; the eighth, though in public school, had friends in the parish school. Sister Mary reported her concern to the Illinois branch of the American Cancer Society, which notified Dr. Schwartz. Then Dr. Robert J. Hasterlik, of the Argonne Cancer Research Hospital, called in epidemiologists from the U.S. Public Health Service's Communicable Disease Center...
Battling the Basement. Hudson's was founded in 1881 by Joseph L. Hudson,* a flamboyant bachelor who specialized in fire sales. His relatives still hold virtually all Hudson's stock. (Among them: Mrs. Edsel Ford, whose mother was J. L.'s sister.) The modern Hudson's gets its character from J. L.'s nephews, Richard, Oscar, Joseph and James Webber-a quartet of merchandising geniuses who took over at J. L.'s death in 1912 and turned Hudson's into a quality department store. In April the three surviving Webber brothers-James died...