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Is tomorrow the day you're going to diet and exercise?
Why not do it today?
By Mary Marshall
IS IT too late to mention New Year's resolutions? No! All right. And if the subject isn't too, too boring, I'd like to urge you all to make some good resolutions about yourselves — about taking care of your faces and your figures. Of course, there's no good reason why we should wait for the turn of the year to make good resolutions, but most of us do wait, and it does somehow give a spurt to the will power to start out fresh with New Year's Day. The spurt is fine — but how about keeping the resolutions you make ? Around and about that little matter, I want to say a few well chosen words.
Don't "resolve" too much. Don't make things too hard for yourself. You know how it is : you say, "The first of the year, I'm going on a diet." And you go on such a rigid diet — right bang off the first day — that the strongest will power would crumble under it. You say, "The first of the year, I'm going to start exercising — really!" And you go at it like a football star in training — for three days, at the end of which time, your poor, bruised and aching bones just naturally quit on you. You say, "The first of the year, I'm really going to brush my hair and massage my scalp —and never go to bed without cleansing my face — and give my nails regular attention — and hold my stomach in all the time — and give up cigarettes and cocktails."
While you're in the resolution-making mood, you
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Roz Russell made smart clothes buy her an entrance into the theatre.