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Word: greyingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Klinger, Elizabeth Arden, Christine Valmy and Adrien Arpel-cater to women who want treatments that they hope will keep their skin appearing young, smooth, wrinkle-free. Prices vary, but the average cost for a one-hour facial is $30. In Los Angeles, where looking good is an obsession, Aida Grey's baby-bottom-pink salon pampers 300 customers daily. They book their appointments as much as four months in advance, and their purses are lighter by $25 to $100 when when they leave. An ad for a $40 "Day of Beauty" at an Adrien Arpel clinic in Beverly Hills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Newest Skin Game | 12/11/1978 | See Source »

...followed by a herbal or seaweed steam facial, manual and deep-pore cleansing, a tightening mask and a makeup consultation. More and more men are showing up in skin-treatment centers too: 10% of Arpel's customers and 20% of Klinger's are men, while both Aida Grey and the Beverly Hills Neiman-Marcus are about to open salons exclusively for them. Reports Billye Newman, an Arpel's executive: "We're not getting the gay guy. We're getting the truck drivers and the men who do dirty work. A jackhammer doesn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Newest Skin Game | 12/11/1978 | See Source »

Maysles's new film, "Grey Gardens," describes the life of Jacqueline Onassis's aunt, Edith Bouvier Beale, and Beale's daughter Edie in their dilapidated Long Island mansion...

Author: By Joseph T. Scarry, | Title: Maysles Talk | 12/1/1978 | See Source »

Maysles will present "Grey Gardens" as the guest of the Freshman Arts Program's Workshop series. The workshops are open to upperclassmen as well as freshmen...

Author: By Joseph T. Scarry, | Title: Maysles Talk | 12/1/1978 | See Source »

...DAYS when big business was so much fun. All those pleasant corporate execs used to caper around the office in their pleasantly grey flannel suits, every now and then molesting the pleasantly available secretaries, and all the while running the engines of the American economy at full throttle. Adam Smith would no doubt have enjoyed it, and probably would have hypothesized some benevolent invisible hand to direct all that frisky lechery and banality toward a common good. At the very least, he would have appreciated the healthy, self-enforced chivalry of the times: martinis at dawn, and to the victor...

Author: By Francis J. Connolly, | Title: A Moderate Success | 11/15/1978 | See Source »

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