Even though court rules prohibit showing them on television or taking their photos, most of these 22 jurors-- including 10 alternates-- seemingly primp each day as though preparing for a center-stage appearance.
42.
East Broadway in Chinatown was one great festive cornucopia of brides on Thursday, its steamy restaurants booked in shifts for wedding receptions and its shops working full tilt to primp and photograph the couples in their rented finery.
43.
They pack them in vans and primp them en route to a national competition every other August that amounts to a beauty pageant for the seven-foot-tall ( two-meter-tall ) Christmas trees.
44.
The fantasy feast that lured you to buy that magazine and try its recipes is the work of food stylists, an ingenious group of food professionals who know how to primp, pamper and prod food to improbable perfection.
45.
Armed with a tackle box of tools including squirt bottles, tweezers, toothpicks, skewers, eyedroppers, turkey basters, surgical gauze and cotton swabs, the food stylist primps and prods the food to an image of perfection.
46.
And Washington University was in mid-primp when the debate fell through, soundproofing its 4, 000-seat arena, laying power cables and pumping up the air-conditioning to keep the debate atmosphere a constant 68 degrees.
47.
Staring at their reflections, the women primp, applying lip liner and face powder, pulling miniature bottles of hair spray from their purses, tousling their bangs, flipping their heads, yanking down and hiking up various articles of clothing.
48.
That's probably an accurate prediction, though the world would be better off living with the category loser, zhush, the " Queer Eye " word of 100 spellings that means primp, fluff, or touch up.
49.
At least Macfadyen gets to scream and primp as the demented warlord, who in a flash goes from shouting at his cringing subordinates " Don't think thoughts ! " to purring, " Do you think purple suits me ?"
50.
The creators also decided that Alice Ghostley and Kaye Ballard should primp in the mirror during their comical number, " Stepsisters'Lament, " rather than peer through a curtain as if they were observing Cinderella and the Prince ( Jon Cypher ).