Word: actually
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...more violent version of the NFL (no fair catches, taunting encouraged) with more sex (cheerleaders in revealing outfits), but that's not really the product it has. After all, the only way to make football more violent than the NFL is to find MVP linebackers who were actually convicted of murder. As far as sex is concerned, those hot, skanky-looking cheerleaders in the XFL television ads were in fact pricey Los Angeles models who can't dance, while the actual XFL cheerleaders are former cheerleaders who can't dance...
Although Schulz appears in the play as a character portrayed by Matthew Glassman, Klein also draws upon actual objects surrounding his life, having come across many of Schulz’s drawings, etchings, and correspondence on a research trip to Poland...
Rather than a strict retelling of Cunanan's life, the theater has opted to fictionalize the story for dramatic purposes. Cunanan is now Danny Reyes, played by Daniel Torres, but anyone even vaguely familiar with the actual events will recognize the plotline. Like Cunanan, Reyes is a gay Filipino-American who attended a ritzy, exclusive school and who knew how to charm his way into the right circles. Reyes is driven by his father to excel and for a while he does get a taste of a life that lies beyond his family's means. But after his La Jolla...
...this campus. Coggins also assumed that the goal of activism is to initiate dialogue amongst Harvard students. What a wonderful world it would be if all progress were the result of Crimson op-eds (or better yet, truly rational discourse). Unfortunately, sometimes it takes concrete action to achieve actual results. Yet to Coggins, the opinions of her and her peers, not the wages of Harvard workers or funds raised to combat deadly infections, form the barometer by which success is measured. Narcissism, anyone? SILPA KOVVALI ’10 Cambridge, MA October...
...beginning of the advertising age, our self-branding is none too subtle. We are a blunt lot, in our bikinis and our demands that our friends go right now to check out our blog postings. We've gone 40 years back, to sales tactics predating irony, self-deprecation and actual modesty. We are, as a social network, all so awesome that we will soon not be able to type the number 1, because we will have worn out the exclamation point that shares...