Word: glamorous
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...think the Russian citizens liked Kennedy much as their parents had liked Roosevelt: He was a President who wanted better Soviet-American relations and whose administration semed to promise peace and better times. They especially appreciated the test-ban. And young people particularly felt Kennedy's glamor and charm quite independent of his political role. "I know how most Americans must feel about this," one Russian boy told me, "but I think that people here were sadder than people in some states...
...team to the Ivy Co-Championship last year as a sophomore, and this season he seems to be directing the Crimson to another late surge. Bassett, however, does things like hand-off to other players, and he is not a great passer. This automatically removes him from the glamor-boy race...
...President wants it, although he does, but because the people of Massachusetts need it,"--it becomes manifestly obvious that certain attributes of the older Kennedys are quite unnecessary to the success of EMK. As a man, Ted is handsome, vigorous and charming. As a politician, Ted has the glamor of JFK without the President's inhibitions and introspection. Ted strides through a factory slapping backs with the natural political zest, though not the warmth, of Nelson Rockefeller. Ted enjoys campaigning. Last May he told delegates to the State Convention, "A candidate can't expect support unless he asks...
...market, however good its "gross message," missed one major point: a company pioneering new fields, based on good new ideas and unique people, is worth "more than average." Look at the list of major corporations in existence in 1900 -how many still exist today? Similarly, to be sure, many "glamor" companies being founded today will not survive the next few decades. However, for the survivors, $1 invested today will be worth more than $1 invested in a slower-growing, "established" company, even after speculative excesses have been subtracted. Itek intends to be one of the survivors, perhaps...
...suits finds himself watching and listening to still other men in work clothes and business suits. Which is O.K., up to a point, since TV or any other medium bereft of enlightenment will justifiably fade into oblivion . . . But how long is it since TV has unearthed a new and glamorous femme star to slake the thirst of the aforementioned viewer in quest of relaxation? . . . Occasionally the sought-after glamor in the form of white tie, tails, ballroom scenes and pretty dolls will show up on a Garry Moore show or a Perry Como episode, but, by and large, whether...