Word: shirts
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Tharp's "In the Upper Room," also performed for the first time by the Boston Ballet, is unquestionably a masterpiece. The dancers first enter in Norma Kamali's stylish black-and-white-striped costumes with only a suggestion of color underneath faintly visible when a shirt falls open or a skirt flies...
Depp relies on voice-overs to convey his introspection. He is convincing as a big-eyed innocent (his tattoos hidden beneath a tee-shirt), but there are rebellious moments when the iconic Johnny ("I trashed a Mark Hotel room") Depp comes through. He swills liquor and sucks on cigarettes like a practiced bad boy, greeting Dunaway's flickering tongue and Taylor's open mouth with different types of kisses. But when his character tries to make decisions about love and life, his choices feel scripted...
When asked why he has a .plan, Aaron Y. Mandel '97 (e-mail: amandel@fas) answers, "For essentially the same reason as I'd rather wear a t-shirt from a concert or convention or other nifty thing than a plain one. People get a kick out of seeing their favorite author quoted in someone else's .plan, which is probably at the back of many minds when .plans are written." Mandel's current .plan is a collage of sorts containing huge blocks of "obscure" song lyrics and quotes of things that have been said to him "which...
...looking, but they are not cute in the traditional sense of the word. Guitarist/vocalist Tim Armstrong, formerly of punk/ska act Operation Ivy, sported a leather jacket, combat boots and spiked mohawk that was pushing six inches. Lars Fredriksen, the other guitarist/vocalist, has an even more interesting fashion sense: white shirt, red suspenders, and bright blond hair sticking straight out eight inches in every direction. Fredriksen looked like the genetic mutation of a character from "Fraggle Rock," some sort of sea-urchin-meets koosh ball...
...image of the U.S. has been of an imperialist country,'' says history teacher Samuel Vargas as he guides his sixth graders around the monument. Watching them, Luis Garcia, a castle guard, offers a different view. Unbuttoning his gray uniform, he reveals a T shirt emblazoned NEW YORK. In fact, since 1988 Chicago has become Garcia's second home. After 25 years guarding the Boy Heroes, he earns only $40 a week. For the past seven years, he has taken a May-to-October leave of absence, hopped a plane to visit his sister, then overstayed his tourist visa to work...