Word: skinful
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...turf in skintight sequined costumes, including a short white outfit emblazoned with a crimson H that she made out of an old prom dress. Her hair is piled high atop her head—she says it takes two hours to style it for competition—and her skin shimmers with glitter spray, glitter powder, and roll-on body glitter. Of course, glitter isn’t her whole life. She’s also a member of the ballroom dance team, a Drug and Alcohol Peer Adviser, and a member of Phillips Brooks House’s Chinatown...
...body. She’s only singing of the impression said boy has made on her heart. There are no roses or initials etched on Sparks’ shoulder, or at least none that we can see. Instead, squeaky clean and revealing very little skin, Jordin twirls about on a carousel. Images of Sparks on a boardwalk are juxtaposed with “serious” black and white shots of the singer emoting; clearly, she’s a young woman on the brink of a nervous breakdown. Are we alternating between memories of happiness and the inevitable heartbreak...
Scientists unearthed the preserved remains of a 67 million-year-old hadrosaur in North Dakota, one of only a tiny handful of dinosaurs ever found with evidence of skin. The skin of this herbivore is not just an impression in rock but actually intact, with muscles and organs probably preserved within. The discovery has already changed scientists' understanding of how the giant reptile lived...
While there might have been plenty of food to go around at the second annual Naked Ladies Brunch on Dec. 2, there was a disturbing lack of skin. Being fond of nudity, (see: cover of the Oct. 31 “Liberty Divided” issue), FM was a little perturbed to find the sartorial bonding focused more on the swapping of clothes than the stripping of them. And while there was a roomful of women, and clothes of all shapes and sizes piled into corners, there wasn’t a bare body in sight. Perhaps it should have...
...Alexander S. Thompson ’11 said. But other attendees expressed clear support for the candidate. Lisa R. Markland, a resident of Dorchester, called Obama a candidate for all people. “It’s not to do with the color of his skin or Hillary’s skin, it’s more to do about the issues,” she said. A black volunteer said that Obama gave her children hope that they too could be president. “He’s more than just 50 Cent...