Word: digest
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...field, league officials allowed teams to hold spring sessions for the first time since the 1950s. Joining what Brown alumnus Joe Paterno called "the real world," each squad was granted 12 spring training days to work out kinks and digest...
Sarah Van Boven, for example, is a senior at Princeton who interned for a semester last year at the Voice of America in London. She has applied her experience reporting for the VOA's international-programming service to the task of writing for the news digest in our Chronicles section...
...development suffer needlessly due to the time constraints. O'Brien might do herself well by trying to expand the length of the show, or at least slow it down. Not only would it establish the play as a more serious piece of work, it might allow the audience to digest more of its valuable message. Right now, it is so jam-packed with intelligence that some of it can't help but leave us feeling a little illiterate...
...partners cut the cake. One senior partner is said to have been served an especially big slice: about $30 million. Since Goldman is a private partnership, it is not required to make public its finances. Nonetheless, the telltale numbers from a Goldman prospectus made their way into Investment Dealers' Digest. Other bits of evidence occasionally fall into the public domain. When Goldman co-chairman Robert Rubin quit to work as a presidential adviser, his disclosure statement reported a 1992 income from Goldman of $26.5 million...
...having discarded our CIA dreams, we turn to the next best thing--uh, gossip. We don't have any advice on that either, sorry. (It's midterms. Who cares what your roomates are doing?) Instead, we leave you with this profound thought to digest over breakfast: where have we gone in the past 25 years? Think about...