Tyler Cordaro

Tyler Cordaro

Friday, April 13, 2007

fishing

Simmons, Jannace & Stagg Goaltender Wade Dubielewicz has carried the Islanders in place of injured Rick DiPietro, who is set to return to practice today. Dubie played well against the NHL's leading offense as the Sabres outshot the Islanders 35-21, thanks to six power plays compared to three for the Islanders.

But after the Islanders managing a 1-all tie midway through the second period, the Sabres' Chris Drury scored two goals to break the game open. Late in the third, defenseman Brian Campbell added his second of the game and the second on the power play for the Sabres to wrap it up.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Michael Kupfer

Michael Kupfer



re's the rundown of the weekend. Be prepared for a long drama-filled blog as usual. Friday after classes me and Elizabeth decided to go see re's the rundown of the weekend. Be prepared for a long drama-filled blog as usual. Friday after classes me and Elizabeth decided to go see Copeland in concert in Nashville at Rocketown. Then we decided we weren't gonna go, then we decided we were, so we wentre's the rundown of the weekend. Be prepared for a long drama-filled blog as usual. Friday after classes me and Elizabeth decided to go see Copeland in concert in Nashville at Rocketown. Then we decided we weren't gonna go, then we decided we were, so we wentCopeland in concert in Nashville at Rocketown. Then we decided we weren't gonna go, then we decided we were, so we went

Friday, April 06, 2007

bill

Elkins's "more of it around than anybody can read" refers mainly to specialist art publications, from the glossiest and most readable to the most hermetic and small-circulation "little magazines." But occasionally, one of the mass-circulation magazines offers what's called in the business a "package" or "takeout" on art. The December 2006 Vanity Fair, for instance, devoted almost 80 pages in what its cover designated "The Art Issue" to the contemporary art "universe." To be fair, the VF treatment did offer a platter of red meat--a symposium on the state of the art world with a prominent dealer, collector, editor, artist, auctioneer and curator, profiles of established and emerging artists, and looks back at the Warhol Factory and the dramatis personae of early modernism. But, in the context of a magazine that smells like a cosmetics counter, feels like a Christmas catalogue and looks like a runway show, art bottom-lined once again as a frou-frou for the trendy rich. In W's "Art Issue," which ran a month earlier, art fared no better.

Judging by the newspapers of many major American cities and some national magazines, the more straightforwardly journalistic popular press appears to be covering art with some thoroughness. Roberta Smith, Holland Cotter and Michael Kimmelman at the New York Times, Peter Schjeldahl at the New Yorker, Mark Stevens at New York magazine, Jerry Saltz at the Village Voice, Jed Perl at the New Republic, Arthur Danto at the Nation, Ken Johnson (now) at the Boston Globe, Edward Sozanski and Edith Newhall at the Philadelphia Inquirer, Christopher Knight and David Pagel at the Los Angeles Times, Kenneth Baker at the San Francisco Chronicle, Robert L. Pincus at the San Diego Union-Tribune and several others produce a veritable mountain of words about art every month. And most if not all of their publications also print additional art writing by freelancers and stringers.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Hot Chick

Yo last yesterday i saw this hot chicks website leena ferrari . Yo B she was mad hot . like the hot sauce at tacobell.

the word "girl" is often used as an intended compliment or used humorously. A woman of a certain age might be called a girl to suggest that she looks younger than she is, or a group of women might speak of themselves as "us girls", though all are well over the age of maidenhood. Adult women will sometimes refer to themselves as "girls", as in "We're having a girls' night out" or "It's a girl thing". But social shifts generally permit only the female gender group themselves to use such terminology without giving offense.