Word: outfitting
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...SHIRT has long been a staple of the American wardrobe. Beyond its role as the most basic part of any non-outfit, the t-shirt has come to serve as a personal billboard. Messages run from the mundane to the inane. Trying to determine whether there is meaning behind the madness of t-shirt today. I asked students around campus what the messages on their shirts mean...
Already Bronfman has earned the title of mischiefmaker. His sorties are tilting the fortunes of several prominent companies-not just Matsushita, MCA and his own but also Du Pont, Time Warner and infant multimedia outfit DreamWorks SKG. Last week, for $8.8 billion, the chemical giant bought back most of Seagram's 24.1% of Du Pont stock. Time Warner, of which Seagram owns a provocative 14.9%, braced for a messy stock scramble should Bronfman sell his shares. DreamWorks also looked to the shy, dapper mogul for indications that he would retain MCA's current, embattled management and thus be in line...
...York, the Chinese designer Han Feng, whose skill is also in color and fabric, showed her most sophisticated collection yet, and the Vietnamese Vivienne Tam floated some graceful, filmy cocktail dresses in black and white. Both offerings were abbreviated compared with the 100-outfit extravaganza launched by de la Renta, but collections like these are among the small pleasures of following fashion. Feng and Tam stick strictly to what their fabrics tell them and succeed in creating highly individual silhouettes...
Today, and tomorrow, any ambitious entertainment outfit must be an all-purpose, universal-joint conglomerate--for two big reasons. First, the media are converging, one on top of the other, even as the computer, phone line and TV screen are converging into the brave new integrated system of tomorrow. Second, the globalization of the U.S. entertainment industry is roaring forward unabated, making Hollywood an exhilarating, sky's-the-limit export factory...
...pays for all this? Janie Bush, director of the Choice Foundation, a Dallas-based pro-choice group, says L.D.I. seems to have "virtually an unlimited supply of finances behind it." Crutcher won't say exactly where his outfit's funding originates, only that L.D.I. relies on sympathetic donors and that it will "not take a penny" from possible malpractice awards in any of the 71 cases it currently supports, none of which have yet gone to trial. In a 1992 issue of the L.D.I. publication, Firestorm: A Guerrilla Strategy for Pro-Life America, Crutcher advocated using such suits not just...