Word: plumpings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...plump Jewish matron sits in the stands watching her son play baseball, then looks over in consternation at a new arrival in the crowd and croons to herself, "Just what I wanted at a Little League game -- my ex-husband's ex- lover. Isn't that what every mother dreams of?" In that moment, actually among the funniest and happiest of an off-Broadway musical set in the early months of the AIDS epidemic, Falsettoland expresses its edgy wit, cockeyed charm and matter-of-fact acceptance of a world Norman Rockwell never painted...
...wait for Shakespeare to disclose its full power. "There's no art/ To find the mind's construction in the face," complained Duncan in Macbeth, but he was a primitive Scot; after Titian, there emphatically was such an art. The fierce, glaring authority of Doge Andrea Gritti; the plump self-assurance of the Florentine historian Benedetto Varchi; the saurian cunning of old Pope Paul III, huddled in his velvet cape; and the inflexible determination of the military commander Francesco Maria della Rovere, whose carapace of bombshell-black armor is painted with a freedom and virtuosity that looks forward to Velazquez...
...days when the economy was expanding, the cold war ending and the peace dividend looming large, Ronald Reagan cherished a famous fantasy about flying with Mikhail Gorbachev over the sun-soaked swatches of Southern California, with its mosaic of turquoise swimming pools and tidy lawns and fat white garages plump with new cars. "Those are the homes of American workers," he would proudly declare, describing a Hollywood dreamland where auto mechanics have summer houses and anyone can go to college...
...serves as the staging ground for all three of the major skin cancers. Both basal-cell and squamous-cell carcinomas arise from the most common skin cells, the keratinocytes, which form at the base of the epidermis and work their way toward the surface. Near the base, they are plump and are called basal cells. But as they move outward, they flatten to become the squamous cells that form the skin's tough, protective surface. Melanomas spring from melanocytes, cells that produce pigment...
...didn't even try to be all-inclusive of the Harvard experience when we picked these photos. We don't want to remember all those hours we spent in Lamont. But we will remember the girl dwarfed by old, plump officers at the unveiling of the JFK statue, the time we snuck into the Lampoon when Malcolm Forbes came, the first and only time that we ever heard Derek Bok speak--during Orientation Week. So we'll keep on waiting for the decisive moment. Or something like that...