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...said Adomanis, who is also a Crimson editorial editor.“Towards the end of the course there was a bit of a headwind, so we were finding it harder to move forward,” he added. “You can never sit on your laurels too much in a sport, and the next step is to work on that a bit—the end of the race, the sprint, to prepare ourselves for if we have to pull it out at the end of the race.”The second varsity recorded a victory...
...when a Jackson Pollock or a Gustav Klimt can go for about $140 million, it's no surprise that one institution after another has begun to see its "permanent collection" as just so much movable merchandise. But art is no ordinary inventory. Briskly disposing of it doesn't always sit well with people who like to visit the art, to say nothing of the people who donate it and who like to suppose that their gifts won't be swept out the door a few years down the road...
...things stood until April 5, when Tennessee attorney general Robert Cooper, whose office has the power to approve or disapprove charitable arrangements, rejected the arranged sale because of the difference between $7 million and what Fisk could get on the open market. Now lawyers for both sides plan to sit down in a judge's chambers to see if a new deal can be worked out. Eventually, Fisk fully expects to be taking something to market...
...House Committees] should sit with the House masters and talk about the findings,” Nelson said. “I think it would be more effective if it was done at the local level...
Simon Rich ’06-’07 knows a great recipe for Brussel sprouts, loves Roald Dahl, and hates dogs. He is also modest.“I just sit down every day and just write a ton of stuff,” he says. “Most of it’s terrible. I don’t think I’m very funny in person.”Jon Stewart would beg to differ.Rich, former president of the Harvard Lampoon (which, due to a rivalry that even Rich doesn’t understand...