Word: sighted
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...four delegates flew to Nice-but the next thing France knew, they had flown via Switzerland to Egypt to confer with France's archenemy. President Nasser. Last week, having dropped out of sight for 2% months, they arrived in Morocco to swear allegiance to Mohammed...
...Sight. In a Rome nightclub two months ago with Brazil's metals-rich Francisco ("Baby") Pignatari, Linda lost a jade earring. Sympathetically, the 41-year-old Baby suggested a trip to Hong Kong for a replacement, and off they flew. When their shopping was done, they decided to go on around the world to Rio. Linda collected a few baubles along the way-including a $4,000 diamond "engagement ring...
Before the wedding, Linda made a quick trip home to Mexico from Rio. As soon as her plane was out of sight, Baby called in the press and, reported the Brazil Herald,'"told reporters that his affair with Linda Christian was definitely at an end." Later, Baby put his position more bluntly. "I made no promises," he said. "I just said we were engaged so I could get her into the same hotel suites with me." Linda dashed back, spent several days chasing Baby by phone, then made a face-saving retreat to a film festival at Uruguay...
...deference to this home-cooking atmosphere, the club bans off-color acts, hustles drunks out of sight. On week nights groups of 20 or more who want to dance, munch steerburgers, and watch the show from left field, can get out of the Town & Country on a package deal for as little as $3 apiece. But. depending on the attraction, the minimum can also run to $6.50 a head, and there may be as many as 4,500 customers a night (the crowd is politely asked to leave after the first show to make room for the second shift). With...
...women and children moving 7,000,000 head of cattle to summer pasture 15,000 ft. above sea level. Jerusalem's Mosque of Omar was "more beautiful than St. Mark's in Venice." The glories of Istanbul burst over Author Sitwell as he caught his first sight of its Imperial Mosques, bestriding the seven-hilled skyline ''like huge kettledrums with something menacing and martial in their air, and in that moment [Istanbul] is alone and tremendous . . . more of a capital than any other city, more than London, or than Rome or Paris...