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...defense.“Our receiving corps stepped up big today—they were just in the right spot,” Pizzotti said. “For as many times as I dropped back today, I didn’t get touched, really, which is a great credit to our offensive line. I think one of the keys is just being able to stand in the pocket and have confidence that no one’s really coming after me.”The only hits he took all day came when he tucked the ball...

Author: By Malcom A. Glenn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: NOTEBOOK: Defensive Line Dominates During Second Half | 11/4/2007 | See Source »

...have our first big-game catch of the 2007 housing slump and credit crunch. On Oct.30, Stan O'Neal resigned his post as CEO of Merrill Lynch after reporting that his firm would suffer a $7.9billion hit to the value of its assets because of bad bets on mortgage-related securities. O'Neal personally took blame for Merrill's forceful push into complex instruments designed to distribute the risk of a surging subprime-mortgage market--the ones now imploding as home prices flatline and defaults spike...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Market Casualties | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...acknowledging that the University had long viewed the practice of the arts as most appropriately located outside the curriculum. This has in some measure changed, and numbers of classes—in music performance, painting, sculpture, writing, photography, film production, for example—now can be taken for credit. Yet such classes are never adequate for the number of students who wish to take them, and we retain vestiges of earlier attitudes in our treatment of the creative arts as subjects for academic credit in the undergraduate curriculum. Recognizing that any alteration in the undergraduate curriculum rests with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Charge to the Task Force on the Arts at Harvard University | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...Newsweek, and Floyd Norris, chief financial correspondent for The New York Times, were joined by Jeffrey A. Frankel, professor at the Kennedy School of Government, and economics professor Edward L. Glaeser. Quinn said it was nearly impossible for journalists to have predicted with certainty the extent of the global credit crunch. “You start getting into a slightly different area where even Wall Street didn’t know how to value [mortgage-backed bonds],” she said. “I don’t care how good of an investigative journalist...

Author: By Athena Y. Jiang, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Panel Discusses Economy, Media | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...best resource our kids have is their school faculty. I am reminded of this fact every Monday afternoon at Math Club, held in my English classroom. The students who attend regularly don’t just come for the extra credit. They come because they love math. They come because they love hearing the teachers on my hallway debate the best way to solve an old AMC problem about the area of Farmer Bob’s land. We teachers are the Helena Aquarium...

Author: By Charles J. Mcnamara | Title: Teaching for America, In Rural Arkansas | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

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