Word: bottomly
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...drawings of what were to become Uglydolls to a major toy company (he's mum about which one). "They flat out told me none of my characters could translate into anything," he says. Frustrated, that night he wrote Kim a letter with a little drawing of Wage at the bottom. "Basically I was like, I'm going to work hard and find a way for us to get back together." When Kim received the letter, she decided to do something with it. "I knew it would make David happy to see his character alive in the real world," she says...
...elected, they would eliminate the UC’s role as middleman between students and the administration and transfer decision-making power to undergraduates.Neither Hwang nor Wong have had any UC experience, but they embrace their outsider status. “Our solution is to change the system bottom-up,” Wong says. A LAISSEZ-FAIRE UCIn line with his vision of expanding student freedoms, Hwang says that he would institute a “laissez-faire system,” where undergraduates—not council members—would decide which student groups get UC funding.Hwang...
...Bottom Line: Though passionate, Estevez’s impassioned answer to the famous “We want Kennedy” cry is ultimately unfulfilling...
...problems with it, I still offer you: Three Tips for Rocking the Non-Cleavage Look: 1. Try and pair your high-necked shirt with tight jeans, leggings, or a skirt. They balance out your proportions. The more you wear on top, the less you have to wear on the bottom. How empowering! 2. Look for high-necked frilly blouses. These are very popular this season and will also make you look like Laura Ingalls Wilder, which is always a plus. 3. Relish how men love you for your mind or something like that. —Columnist Rebecca M. Harrington...
...bottom line is that risk doesn't exist in a vacuum and that there are a host of factors that come into play, including the rewards of risk, whether they are financial, physical or emotional. It is this very human context in which risk exists that is key, says Adams, who titled one of his recent blogs: "What kills you matters - not numbers." Our reactions to risk very much depend on the degree to which it is voluntary (scuba diving), unavoidable (public transit) or imposed (air quality), the degree to which we feel we are in control (driving...