Word: make-up
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...legislative body of NSA. Each member school sends a certain number of voting delegates according to its enrollment (up to seven). Each student government is left free to select delegates as it sees fit. Clearly there are many instances when the students have little control over the eventual make-up of their school's delegation. Structurally at least, it would seem that NSA is fatally unrepresentative...
...course a flavor alone doesn't absolutely determine anything as objective as courses or extracurricular activities. Yet the composition of Fine Arts 13 somehow feels different. There seems to be more flirting, joking, and talking, more girls with careful make-up and shiny clean hair than in most lower level survey courses. And majors like Soc. Rel., Fine Arts, History, English, and History and Lit., some-how have a peachiness about them...
...properly precious. Adele, the beautiful deceiver who reduces Boubouroche to grovelling prostration, is played by Penny Hays, mistress of the cultivated pout and expert as the picture of outraged innocence manipulating male gullibility. Jay V. Pati's Boubouroche is a little less convincing, due largely, I think, to his make-up-- a cross between the Great Gildersleeve and a silent movie Simon Legree, with a touch of the young Cesar Romero. He simply looks too worldy-wise and cunning for a man who hadn't had a mistress till he was thirty. Nevertheless, Mr. Pati knows what he is about...
Although the front pages have been attractive, the make-up has not been consistently good. Occasional inside pages present the unrelieved gray of long banks of type, without pictures, charts, or anything else to encourage the reader. When the National Observer uses pictures, it uses them well; the page-long photograph of the Saturn rocket on the front of the first issue is striking, as is a huge shot of the Matterhorn in the second. But there still remain long stretches of unbroken type, which simply will not be read...
...controlled state legislatures have refused to re-district. The line of opposition these Congressmen have taken is addressed to a United States that no longer exists, namely, the rural country that elected them. Their opposition to the Urban Affairs Department symbolizes the anachronism. As the New Republic notes: "The make-up of the House reflects the increasing under-representation of urban areas... Farm areas now have 20 to 30 seats that could not stand the test of equitable reapportionment...