Word: windowful
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...David's Overcamp and Gammons, is painted in a delicate cousin of Pepto-Bismol pink, and follows the carefully upholstered chintz precedent set by "The Philadelphia Story" this spring. Sound, designed by Jane Shaw, is minimal in the Ex; but the set's window was never broken without a crisp effect. Dune Becker's lighting maintained a rosy comedy glow even when the situation looked dark for the cast...
...stuff to take a long needed sabbatical to her home in New York City. My bedroom for the summer was to be her former workspace with her desk and dresser and chair taking up most of the room. I close the room because one wall is an enormous bay window, which, despite the traffic noise, lets in a lot of light. I moved my stuff into a corner while she tried to unload drawers and cram the contents into boxes and bags...
...turned 21 this summer, and I have a right to go anywhere. But just as quickly as the window of opportunity opens, it shuts. But I shut it under my own volition. I'm not ready yet. It's going to take a little bit longer for me to fly. So in the end, I guess I'm learning how to lose my childhood. I have stepped over the threshold from Blake's "Innocence" to his "Songs of Experience." Just give me a little time to get comfortable, then I'll really show you what I've got to offer...
...right to an abortion, that the sale of guns should be strictly curtailed and that gays should be allowed to marry and join the military. Sure, majorities are supposed to rule in this country, but the Republicans didn't want to see all that lobbying money go out the window...
...three days before the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion -- Kennedy tilted back on the hind legs of a leather chair in the Cabinet Room and, I believe, decided to send Americans to the moon. I watched it happen in one of those unusual episodes when Kennedy opened a window on the inner White House for an outsider. Maybe he understood that, as astronomer Michael Hart wrote, the moon landing would "be forever remembered as one of the greatest achievements of the human race." I think Kennedy, steeped in history, saw himself beside Thomas Jefferson sending Lewis and Clark to explore...