Word: wearingly
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...mentioned a defense fund started by Oliver North's Naval Academy classmates. Your readers should be aware that there are Annapolis graduates who are not impressed with his performance and who would not contribute to such a fund. As long as we wear a uniform, we are responsible to the nation for our actions. There may be security reasons for not testifying in open session. There are no reasons for not testifying in closed session. Taking the Fifth Amendment to cover professional actions is against the traditions North learned at Annapolis...
...your vagina could talk, what would it say? What would it wear?” asked Adrienne M. White ’08, clad in the show’s white top-blue jeans uniform. Metaphors abounded: vaginas are seen as flowers, furniture, black holes. Sarah Mortazavi ’09’s spot-on portrayal of a seventy-year-old woman describing her perception of her vagina was the highlight of such moments meant to celebrate female empowerment...
...have attacked more than 2,000 offending websites, says Zone-H.org a cybercrime monitoring group. Posting from PAJAMASMEDIA, Malkin said she had traced the attack to hackers using a Turkish Internet provider. SISTER TOLDJA comforted, "Stay strong Michelle," while SUITABLY FLIP marveled, "Very cloak and dagger. And the baddies ... actually wear cloaks and use daggers...
...competitors such as Jil Sander and Bottega Veneta in a duel of trends that pitted the ultrasexy look of the '80s against the sober minimalism of the '90s. Sex vs. sobriety is an age-old Milanese rivalry--one that goes back to the early days of Italian ready-to-wear when Giorgio Armani stood on one side of the fashion ring with his sleek, pared-down pantsuits and Gianni Versace fought back with high-octane glamour and glitz. More recently, in the late '90s, Tom Ford played Gucci against the artsier Prada label with the kind of slick vulgarity that...
...competitors such as Jil Sander and Bottega Veneta in a duel of trends that pitted the ultrasexy look of the '80s against the sober minimalism of the '90s. Sex vs. sobriety is an age-old Milanese rivalry - one that goes back to the early days of Italian ready-to-wear when Giorgio Armani stood on one side of the fashion ring with his sleek, pared-down pantsuits and Gianni Versace fought back with high-octane glamour and glitz. More recently, in the late '90s, Tom Ford played Gucci against the more artsy Prada label with the kind of slick vulgarity...