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Word: brickes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Harvard athletes know failure all the time. Our wide receivers drop easy passes, goalies let slow pucks dribble by and our guards brick crucial free throws. Harvard teams are quite good by Ivy standards, but they still lose. And often it’s not because the opponent was too good. It’s because Harvard athletes, for a moment, tried hard but just failed to perform...

Author: By Elijah M. Alper, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: EA Sports: Making Virtue of Mediocrity | 6/5/2003 | See Source »

...four years with The Crimson, I’ve explored the highways and skyways of the Ivy League region. Back in the salad days before the economy hit a brick wall, I even flew to Philadelphia the morning before a football game...

Author: By Rahul Rohatgi, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Rahooligan: Of Road Trips and Camaraderie | 6/5/2003 | See Source »

Ensconced behind the brick walls of 14 Plympton, Seidman also sought to cover the growing South African divestment movement on campus...

Author: By Stephen W. Stromberg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Seidman Lives Routine of Globetrotting, International Activism | 6/4/2003 | See Source »

...than the psychodrama of Bourgeois's sculptural pieces, with their sources in the clammiest corners of the psyche and in the meat and moisture of the human body. In recent years she has been showing variations on an enormous metal spider. The one at Dia: Beacon, wedged into a brick-lined confinement, is the best, and best displayed, of any of them, holding in its grip a cage in which you see tattered tapestries that recall the ones Bourgeois's family repaired as a business...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Let's Supersize It! | 5/26/2003 | See Source »

...Harvard’s preferred name for the tower), and a massive “bridge” (really an elevated building) between the two. It is complicated in that the surfaces of these elements are treated in all sorts of crazy styles and textures. There is brick in many shades, laid in a variety of corduroy patterns; there is engineered stone (cast concrete), both rough and smooth; there are windows, both protruding and flush. The surface of the “bridge” is striated with a pattern of engineered stone; while subtle and somewhat creative, this hodgepodge...

Author: By Zachary R. Heineman, | Title: Harvard's Newest Ivory Tower | 5/23/2003 | See Source »

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