Word: trademark
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...recent interview with Rick Bentley in the Sacramento Bee, Hefner declared that the Playmate was as young and hip as ever: ?The trademark products are now more popular than ever before, and you see them on high school girls, and you see the fashions in Vogue and Harper?s Bazaar. There are more references to Playboy in rap songs and hip-hop songs, the music of young people, than there has ever been before. Playboy is both contemporary and retro...
Indeed, Rumsfeld answers the question of whether he misjudged the postwar challenges with a trademark Rumination. "Let me give you a perspective," he says. "You come into these jobs--there's not a lot of time for reflection--you better know two-thirds of the things you're gonna need to know when you get in here, 'cause you're not going to have time to learn three-quarters. You can learn an eighth or a quarter or a third, but you can't learn it all. And the same thing is true in a big, massive project like...
...DIED. PAUL SIMON, 75, liberal Democratic congressman and two-term senator from Illinois who ran unsuccessfully for President in 1988; in Springfield, Illinois. Simon, who wore a trademark bow tie and large glasses, argued for shifting spending from the military to social programs, but favored balanced budgets. The son of American missionaries to China, he was a key congressional backer of Taiwan...
...himself into the piece's emotions, laughing at the jokes he's seen a thousand times. "I know it seems odd, me watching my shows so much," he says. "But I enjoy them in a very heartfelt way." So do many theater-goers, who've become hooked on his trademark touches: classic stories boldly re-imagined, with plenty of movie references, strong veins of visual humour (in Nutcracker, now playing in Sadler's Wells, the dancing cream cake is hilariously reinvented as Rudolf Valentino), a touching sense of vulnerability (the same show has Clara in a frightening Victorian orphanage...
...enduring legacy of Undergraduate Council President Rohit Chopra ’04 will not be the quashing of preregistration, universal keycard access or urban planning measures from dance space to Allston. No, it’ll be the dry zingers he lets loose in public, delivered in his trademark deadpan. Chopra has never shied away from press—be it The Crimson, Business Week, or the Baltimore Sun—and he makes it worth a reporter’s while with remarks like the ones below, excerpted in chronological order...