Word: displayful
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...variety of things debunked by the medical community are advertised on the Internet.' KIM GANDY, president of the National Organization for Women, criticizing Google's decision to display antiabortion ads from religious groups "in a factual...
While I realized it would be disturbing (and so it was), I nonetheless read your article on Hirst, since I'd had the misfortune some months back of seeing in the flesh one of his grotesque works (a slaughterhouse on display to the public, really) at the base of Lever House, on the streets of Manhattan. Like Hirst, I'm amused by the affluent morons who feel compelled to throw their money at him for the monstrosities that his production lines seemingly roll out in copious quantities. Hirst himself appears to be a thoroughly tortured individual. He deserves that state...
...tennis over three days,” co-captain Chris Clayton said. “I was happy with the way everybody performed, especially under pressure, and being a little tired by the final day.” In the Northeast Invitational, Harvard produced a competitive display with several successes throughout the singles brackets. Competing in bracket one, Clayton opened with a double Ivy League scalp—defeating Princeton’s George Carpeni (6-3, 6-3) and Colombia’s Jon Wong (4-6, 6-0, 7-5)—although he eventually succumbed...
...future career prospects to why he chose to mention that his ex-girlfriend thought his “splooge tasted like unripe bananas” are dwarfed by the sheer audacity of the act itself. The immense self-love poured into a full-color magazine essentially produced to display the mind and body of its creator is truly astounding. Diamond magazine is Harvard’s answer to Alexy Vayner, the Yale graduate who became a YouTube sensation after his preposterously self-promoting job application video “Impossible Is Nothing” made the rounds on the Internet...
...Fogg and the Busch-Reisinger Museum’s collections have found a home in the walls of the Sackler. “Re-View,” the new exhibit showcasing works from all three museums together for the first time, spans continents and centuries. The first floor displays European and American art since 1900; the second floor, Asian and Islamic art from 5000 BC to the present; and the fourth, Western art from antiquity to 1900. The breadth and quality of the combined collections is apparent when walking through the three floors, as are the endless possibilities...