Word: suited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Levi's, a red minidress and an unwashed London Fog raincoat. Surveying Galahad's Pad in the East Village for color picture possibilities, Andrea Svedberg had her arms ornamented hippie style with Day-Glo paints. San Francisco Bureau Chief Judson Gooding was gauche enough to wear a suit and tie to a celebration in Golden Gate Park, and was suspected of being a "narco" (narcotics agent). Malcolm Carter, TIME'S Stanford University stringer, did much better with a second-hand kelly-green flannel shirt and a string of Philippine seed beads. Washington Correspondent Philip Mandelkorn managed...
Rubberneckers are now as much a part of The Hashbury scene as are hippies. At the Drogstore, where a bowl of minestrone or a hamburger costs 75?, goggle-eyed straights in suit and tie sniff the air for the musky-sweet scent of marijuana; others flock to such hippie shops as the Print Mint and the Phoenix to buy pornographic or psychedelic posters...
...N.C.A. action could throw Parsons into still deeper trouble since its expansion was financed in part by $5.2 million in mortgages from Connecticut insurance companies, which were secured by a pledge to maintain accreditation. Parsons' trustees last week also brought suit in a federal court for an injunction preventing the N.C.A. from lifting the college's accreditation...
...more popular with stockholders and unions than with executives. Freely predicting that 4,000 corporate jets will be flying by 1975, the industry figures that one company's purchase of a jet will give its executives so much speed and mobility that rivals will be compelled to follow suit. "It's not just keeping up with the Joneses," says William F. Remmert, whose St. Louis-based Remmert-Werner, Inc., markets North American's Sabreliners. "It's keeping up with the competition in a business sense...
...Common Market has prompted quite a few Western European businesses to integrate across national boundaries, and U.S. companies which operate there are rapidly following suit. Dow Chemical and Jersey Standard have both centralized European operations, and so to a lesser degree have IBM and International Telephone & Telegraph. The latest American company to join the trend also happens to be one of the largest. Ford Motor Co., which has heretofore overseen all of its overseas activities from the U.S., is setting up a European-based subsidiary, Ford of Europe, Inc. The new subsidiary, says Chairman Henry Ford II, should provide...