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This is part of the prevailing logic around Harvard's athletic headquarters in the red brick building at 60 JFK Street. Administrators there contend, moreover, that the only ones worthy of criticism at Harvard are the coaches, because they are the paid professionals...

Author: By Jay K. Varma, | Title: The Long Goodbye | 6/10/1993 | See Source »

There's something about Harvard--maybe it's the ivy, all the centuries of brick, or all the oldness around here--that seems to make time run slow...

Author: By Mary LOUISE Kelly, | Title: Seniors Look Back on Their Four Years | 6/9/1993 | See Source »

...further health-plan delay. To some it makes little sense to postpone the health plan if it is going to make up a large part of the budget. But many Democrats, even in the Administration, agree that Clinton is oversubscribed. And on Friday the President added one more brick to his load; a government takeover of the student-loan program, which will lower collegians' interest rate 0.5% but cost 25 billion Republican-lambastable dollars over five years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Leon's Lament | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

...have traditionally come from the church. Formerly a bank president, he is now a developer. And since becoming president of the Brotherhood Crusade 19 years ago, he has built it into one of the most successful black charities. The Crusade, whose 11 full-time employees operate out of a brick building in South Central, is supported primarily by voluntary payroll deductions from black workers in federal and local government as well as the private sector. Total annual budget: $2 million. Bakewell donates his $85,000 salary back to the organization...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Gospel of Equity | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

...weekend in New Orleans to take his single -- and, as it turned out, not quite ! accurate -- shot for a million. Then it all started vanishing like a dream. Within days, he was back at work fixing the aging steam pipes around Camp Lejeune. Back in his neat three-bedroom brick house on a rural lot dotted by a stand of loblolly pines and a satellite dish. Back in Beulaville, a town so small that wife Vickie jokes, "We just got our second traffic light." Back to oblivion. In a week there'd be no more crews from CNN and ESPN...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On Coming Close, So Close | 4/19/1993 | See Source »

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