Word: mark
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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News Editor for this Issue: Noam S. Cohen '89 Night Editors: David J. Barron '89 Noam S. Cohen '89 Mark M. Colodny '89 Spencer S. Hsu '91 Brooke A. Masters '89 Copy Editors: Jennifer Griffin '91 J. Trevor McCabe '91 Editorials Editors: John J. Murphy '89 John C. Yoo '89 Features Editor: Brooke A. Masters '89 Photo Editors: Lisa Clark '89 Eugene L. Jhong '90 Sports Editors: Mark T. Brazaitis '89 Casey J. Lartigue Jr. '89 Godsend Marie B. Morris...
Brown focuses on keeping its rate high. Harvard focuses on power, according to Silk. "The race was basically over when we took our standard power 20 just after the 1000 meter mark," Metz said...
...number-two sinles, netman Mark Leschley fell to Madhy Nair, 7-5, 7-5. After falling behind, 3-2, in the second set, Leschly rebounded to take a 5-4 advantage. But the sophomore could not hold on, dropping the set and match...
...designed for just any consumer, they're for the wealthy, the status-conscious, the elite. Literature and art can now do for high-priced luxury items what alligators and polo ponies did for those once-cheap cotton sport shirts--they imbue the product with an unmistakeable mark of prestige...
...part of an incorporation of "culture" into consumerism. Books and paintings are not to be experienced, considered, even analyzed or simply enjoyed. They are a mark of status and can be consumed just like any other commodity. Literature and fine art have simultaneously been brought closer to and further from us. Now they are like the extravagant goodies behind the Bloomingdale's shop window. They are for all to see but for only a few to experience...