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Rise to the Top. Habitually clad in a cassock often topped by a Homburg, and said to have carried a pistol in his robes, Youlou at 46 was one of the world's most unusual statesmen. A member of the Lari tribe-his name means "fetish which cannot be grasped" -he was reared by Catholic missionaries and in 1946 ordained a priest. Later, in defiance of orders from his superior, Youlou ran for the French Assembly (he lost) and was suspended by the church, is still forbidden to say Mass. Because of his suspension, he was acclaimed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Congo Republic: Failure of a Fetish | 8/23/1963 | See Source »

...Narodny Bank was only another agency to finance East-West trade until it began to go capitalist and expanded into a full-fledged merchant bank in the late 1950s under the prodding of a new chairman, personable and professional A. I. Doubonossov, 63, who wears a Homburg. Narodny's prudent bankers handle the extremely sensitive job of selling Soviet gold on the London market, trade actively in foreign currencies, and make short-term loans to British corporations and cities. With a capitalist eye for profit, they even hold $3.9 million in British Treasury certificates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: East-West Trade: Russia's Sterling Success | 7/12/1963 | See Source »

...Homburg set squarely on his head, his natty guardsman's mustache stretched over a smile, a fresh carnation peeping from his lapel, Whalen flashed into the jazz age like a Victorian anachronism. He was the man in the lead car of every great tumultuous Broadway parade, the companion of the hero of the hour, always the host, never the honored guest, forever the other fellow in the news photos. Impeccable in dress, urbane in character, it was he to whom the city turned when it wanted to put on the dog for a visiting celebrity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cities: Hello & Goodbye | 4/27/1962 | See Source »

...Republic last July-was widely admired by most southern Katangese not only for his stout resistance to the onusiens but for his gracious, smiling manner and for the dignity of his somber grey suits. He is never late for an appointment, often arrives five minutes early, then waits outside, homburg in hand, until the hour. He is no playboy; often, at a conference of African bigwigs. Tshombe will retire to his room with a book while the rest of the boys go out nightclubbing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Congo: The Heart of Darkness | 12/22/1961 | See Source »

...though John did not change, he never seemed to date. Then would come John's friends-poets, artists, actors, M.P.s, and a generous sampling of the House of Lords-chatting and advising. Finally, John himself, bearded and majestic, would sweep in, his headgear-whether a beret or black Homburg or battered trilby-cocked at some outlandish angle. He would stay only an hour or so. "Very exhausting, all that," he would say, and be off to his favorite pub-knowing full well that once again he was the talk of the London art world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Inspired Innocent | 11/10/1961 | See Source »

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