Word: premiers
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...bankruptcy, and the PBGC took over its pension plans--which were short $3.7 billion. The company, once America's second largest steelmaker, no longer exists. In the Top 50 pension deadbeats of 1990, the PBGC reported that the funds of Pan Am Corp., operator of what was once the premier global airline, had only one-third of the assets needed to pay its promised pensions. Pan Am does not exist today...
...It’s tough to speculate whether the Crimson would have lost to Lafayette and Cornell with a healthy Dawson. Saturday at least proved that, first, his legs can keep Harvard in the game; and second, he isn’t ready to cede the title of premier Ivy League back to Hartigan just yet. —Staff writer Lisa J. Kennelly can be reached at kennell@fas.harvard.edu...
...goal in seven of its last eight losses. The visiting Tigers (6-8), on the other hand, boast a 5-0 Ivy record and league-leading scorer Paige Schmidt, a two-time league player of the week. The Princeton-Harvard field hockey game is always one of the premier sporting events of the fall. Both clubs boast impressive programs, and the game often determines the Ivy championship. In 2004, the Crimson, then undefeated in the Ivies, grabbed a 1-0 lead on a goal by midfielder Jane Sackovich with 18:55 remaining in the game. The game, and potentially...
...show, it is pretty funny. But it’s not perfect. Colbert’s interview with guest Stone Phillips during the premier felt awkward. It’s one thing, as Sacha Baron Cohen does so well in the Ali G show, to take on a different persona to interview someone who has no idea who you are; when the interviewee is in on the joke, it feels like a waste of our time...
...similarly noble purpose. The educational and research efforts that Harvard sponsors around the globe are making this world a better place. Harvard grants allow low-income students to attend the College with no parental contribution. They sponsor groundbreaking medical research (which, among other things, has made Harvard the premier place for stem-cell research in the U.S.), and they sponsor initiatives to solve longstanding health, poverty, and cultural issues. Every cent that Harvard spends to enhance its public image by matching donations to disaster relief materially disadvantages these efforts—efforts which, ultimately, have more value than relief itself...