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Word: dapper (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...five instruments-two flutes, an oboe, English horn and cello. A chorus of eight women and two soloists. Mezzo-Soprano Marni Nixon and Tenor Hughes Cuenod, were the only voices. Stravinsky conducted in his usual jerky, graceless style, looking, with his prominent eyes and waving tailcoat, rather like a dapper little Beatrix Potter frog...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Contrapuntal Bones | 11/24/1952 | See Source »

...College dean named Henry Lefavour, Simmons climbed out of its position as a mere trade school. In 1927 it was admitted to the Association of American Universities, and two years later it made the New England Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Then, in 1933, Bancroft Beatley, a brisk, dapper professor from the Harvard School of Education, took over. After that, Simmons came into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ED UCATIO N: An Independent Livelihood | 11/17/1952 | See Source »

...autocrat of Father. He is but a chuckling bystander watching the antics of his clansmen, who are notorious in the community because of their many conquests. There's Uncle Desmond, smoothest operator in Quebec, who collects garters and mounts them on cardboard. He inherited his art from Grandpere, still dapper at 67 years and spryly pursuing his latest widow. What story the film has develops when the adolescent (Bobby Driscoll) imitates the attitude of his uncles and gets in trouble...

Author: By Milton S. Gwirtzman, | Title: The Happy Time | 11/14/1952 | See Source »

...prince has never given up his pursuit of those pleasures. As a dapper, rakish fin de siècle student at the Sorbonne, he got the nickname Cur Non (Why Not?) because of his debonair pursuit of food and fun. (He added the "sky" a few years later when the Czar's fine fleet came to visit France.) In 1921, already famed as a gourmet, he began to write his masterpiece, France Gastronomique, in 28 volumes. "When you're searching for good places to eat in provincial towns," wrote Curnonsky, "see the doctors, the cabdrivers and the priests...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Heroic Stomach | 10/27/1952 | See Source »

...Great Dictator (1940) and Modern Times (1936), and goes back to the simple little tramp-meets-girl, loves-girl, loses-girl theme of his famed silent movies. But Chaplin no longer plays the tramp with the cane, battered derby, brush mustache and oversized shoes. In Limelight he is a dapper, though slightly seedy (and in heavy stage make-up rather repulsive) clown in spats and velvet-collared coat. Only a few reminders of the old tramp remain in a couple of music-hall sequences...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Oct. 27, 1952 | 10/27/1952 | See Source »

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