Word: catalogs
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...decorated with inspiration boards that include photos of a Noguchi sculpture, a Marc Newson sketch and a swatch of gray fabric from a chair in his house. "I'm noticing more organic shapes and more black and white than color right now," he says, flipping through an auction catalog filled with works by American artists like Alexander Calder and Robert Motherwell...
...pretty ballad. In these songs, though, are just about the only musical moments that manage to separate themselves from the synth soup that is the rest of the record, and even these seeming standouts will struggle for attention once added to Stereolab’s already enormous back catalog. Stereolab hasn’t made much bad music—there’s still enough spark and talent left in them to keep their standards just high enough—but they don’t turn every synthesizer they touch into gold anymore, either. That should be enough...
...that's just the beginning of an impressive catalog of information that the scientists have added to what was already known - all the more impressive given the limitations placed on the team by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, which is responsible for the skeleton because the Corps has jurisdiction over the federal land on which it was found. The researchers had to do nearly all their work at the University of Washington's Burke Museum, where Kennewick Man has been housed in a locked room since 1998, under the watchful eyes of representatives of both the Corps...
...current students while substantially increasing the number of departmental courses that count towards the core requirement. Designating which departmental courses count towards the core should not require the unpredictable and after-the-fact process of individual student application to the Registrar. A faculty committee, sitting down with the course catalog, could perform the task in a week. This reform actually could be in place by the fall 2006 semester...
Tierney seems to long for the day when American history courses line up in the catalog in neatly marked packages: 101, “From Exploration to Settlement,” 102, “The Revolution,” 103, “The Early Republic.” And so on. The narrative was familiar and reassuring. The names and dates were chiseled in stone. He is right. The Harvard history department doesn’t teach courses like that. We think our students deserve better...