Red hair Healthy glow to cheeks 18th Century Women had trim Crimped or curled heads Powdered Decorated with garlands(vanikud) Wire cages Three feet in the air Feathers Ribbons Jewels Even ships, gardens Victorian Natural beauty Without makeup Used cosmetics less Hygiene and health 1840s heads were sleek, demure Heavy knot of curls Plaits in back 1920s "Bobbed" Waved or shingled hairstyles Louise Brooks Clara Bow Powder Circles to the cheeks Plucked eyebrows Penciled in thin arches Lips very red 1940s Feminine hairstyles Bette Davis' curls Rita Hayworth's gleaming waves A lock of hair that covered one eye. 1950s "Doe eye" Pale complexion Intensely colored lips Curls Waves Bouffants Marilyn Monroe 1960s Dark eyes paired with pale lips Rock'n'roll Short styles Long, straight hair Twiggy 1990s Kate Moss extreme thinness Used literature http://www.blisstree.com/healthbolt/ashorthistoryoftheidealfemalebody/ http://www.ukhairdressers
I love what I've seen of your body so far, but that hasn't been a whole lot." "We can rectify that now." The thought of him stripping for me made me squirm in my seat. He noticed and his mouth curved wickedly. "You'd better not," I said regretfully. "I was late getting back on Friday." "Tonight, then." I swallowed hard. "Absolutely." "I'll be sure to clear my schedule by five." He resumed eating, completely at ease with the fact that we'd both just penciled "mind-blowing sex" into our mental day calendars. "You don't have to." I opened the mini ketchup bottle by my plate. "I need to hit the gym after work." "We'll go together." "Really?" I turned the bottle upside down and thumped the bottom with my palm. He took it from me and used his knife to coax the ketchup onto my plate. "It's probably best for me to work off some energy before I get you naked. I'm sure you'd like to be able to walk tomorrow."
the State Department code room, and burning with evangelical fervor over America's need for cryptanalysis, exercised his potent salesmanship on the State and War departments. He won the concurrence of Frank L. Polk, the acting Secretary of State; then, on May 16, 1919, he submitted to the Chief of Staff a plan for a "permanent organization for code and cipher investigation and attack." Three days later the Chief of Staff approved it, and Polk brown-penciled an "O.K." and his initials on it. The plan envisioned joint financial support by the two departments at about $100,000 a year, but actual expenditures never reached that sum. The State Department's contribution of $40,000, which began on July 15, 1919, could not be legally expended within the District of Columbia, and so Yardley soon found himself moving the nucleus of a staff (largely recruited from MI-8) and the necessary paraphernalia—language statistics, maps, newspaper clipping,