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Usage:

...slinky dress that exposed arms, back--and even a little thigh--started appearing on billboards around their country. Unilever quickly cleaned up its Lux soap ads by pasting a more modest dress on top and joked that Parker was bundling up for winter. Just, please, for mercy's sake, say they didn't touch her Manolo Blahniks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Style That Doesn't Translate | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

DANNER: You have good self-esteem. You're Barbra Streisand, for God's sake...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: High Drama, Low Comedy | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...returning from Iraq last month, Chung visited the Pentagon to implore officials to send more armored humvees to Iraq. He never got in to see Rumsfeld. "I knocked on his door," Chung says, "but the people in his office said I needed an appointment to see him." For the sake of the Americans risking their lives in Iraq, Rumsfeld would be wise to make some time for the soldiers now. --With reporting by Chris Maag/ Cincinnati, Nathan Thornburgh/ New York and Phil Zabriskie/ Baghdad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Safe Are Our Troops? | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

Prina’s work is both extremely sophisticated and extremely complex, and I run the risk of oversimplifying in attempting to offer a concrete description of it. However, for the sake of this discussion I would say that Prina’s work is founded on acknowledging, perhaps even embracing, several fundamental impossibilities in contemporary art making. The first has to do with the production of meaning. Prina told me that at a certain point in his career, taking a cue from the well known French cultural theorist Roland Barthes, he realized that it is impossible for a work...

Author: By Julian M. Rose, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Night and a Day with Stephen Prina | 12/17/2004 | See Source »

...have been a part of, ideology and partisanship have never been a factor,” he said. “Harvard looks for the most brilliant and promising, and none of us have been willing—or even tempted—to compromise these for the sake of ideology, partisanship or anything else...

Author: By Evan H. Jacobs, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Study Shows Professors Express Politics in Class | 12/8/2004 | See Source »

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