Word: andersons
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...second most powerful person, the panel decided, is Anderson Cooper. Not only were my panelists trying to be nerds, but they weren't even good at it. That's when I ordered a couple of bottles of wine, and the names started flying. The Maloof brothers were instantly agreed upon, since their family owns the Palms hotel in Las Vegas. Body painter Mark Frazier was the artist of choice. Michael Jordan, though he retired four years ago, made the list because, as many of the panelists attested, when you're at a party with him, "Jordan buys...
...collectively voiced a legitimate concern, and the university has a responsibility to address it,” says Petersen.Although the results appear decisive, pessimism persists. “If every student voted yes on this, it wouldn’t change,” says UC Representative James W. Anderson ’09, who disagrees with the majority of his colleagues. “It’s a pipe dream,” he continues. “It has to go through so many levels of faculty, of administration.” Anderson believes bureaucratic concerns will...
...second goal of the day with 6:43 remaining, Flood won the faceoff, and a minute later Calvert put in his second of the day.Suddenly, Harvard was down just three. “The thing that was creating goals for us was transition,” Crimson coach Scott Anderson said. “When you start playing more aggressively, it happens a lot. We have the luxury as a team where if we are able to score goals, we get the ball back right away because we are dominating faceoffs.”After Yale stretched the lead...
...last-second goal.“That’s sort of representative of their efforts the whole season: exert leadership, carry the load, set an example, all the things you’d hope anyone in any aspect of life would do,” Harvard coach Scott Anderson said.Flood dominated the faceoff X in what was pegged to be one of his tougher assignments of the year. Facing Bulldog junior Gregory DuBoff, the senior won 15 of 20 faceoffs, including seven of eight in the fourth quarter to give the Crimson a shot.“We have...
...battle was like “American Idol” but with a hell of a lot more street cred. Six contestants took part in the veritable verbal skirmishes before an excitable crowd in three rounds. The contestants went head-to-head exchanging heated personal attacks. Virginia E. Anderson ’08, who helped organize the battle, said she was looking forward to a great show but wasn’t really expecting anything too Tupac-esque. “Harvard students usually write things in books, not like this,” said Anderson. But many would...