Word: glamoured
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Wilcox attributed part of the decline in acceptances to what he called "the end of the elitist period." "There isn't any particular glamour attached to starting as a sophomore, and that takes pressure off people who might accept because it is the "thing to do,'" he added...
...fateful week of Nov. 2, 1929. For all that, the market was diffident and nervous, tugged at from hour to hour by investors changing their stockholdings for tax reasons, by speculators covering short sales of stock and by customers who kept moving into and out of the low-priced glamour stocks...
TUESDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (NBC, 9-11 p.m.). Fred Astaire and Audrey Hepburn in Funny Face wherein a glamour photog (Fred) turns a bookish square (Audrey) into a top model; in Paris; with music...
...King had changed, and everyone in Brussels noticed it; he seemed sportier, more dashing-but he kept blinking. Tired of looking owlish, Belgium's myopic King Baudouin, 35, had doffed his familiar bottle-bottom glasses after 20 years, got himself fitted for contact lenses. MORE GLAMOUR FOR BAUDOUIN, cheered the Flemish weekly Zondag Morgen. There were no cheers from Treasury officials, who had to figure out what would become of those millions of stamps and 20-franc notes featuring the King's bespectacled old image...
...magazines like to dwell, a trifle narcissistically, on their own staffs. Mademoiselle recently described the office of Editor in Chief Betsy Blackwell: "Dark green, warmly cluttered with antiques, and softly lighted by a crystal chandelier, the bower exudes the feminine yet decisive personality of its occupant." Some of Glamour's editors model for the magazine as well as edit; the most successful of these, Gloria Steinem, 30, has been the subject of many Glamour articles: her college career, her parties, her clothes. "Readers are fascinated to see that our lives run parallel to theirs," says Kathleen Casey. "Featuring...