Highlights
A collection of news and information related to Robert Hughes published by Tribune Company sources.
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Independent schools
THE FAVORITE Notre Dame is coming off one of the most disappointing seasons in school history. Much of the struggles were because of inexperience that now comes back a bit more seasoned. Leading the way for Charlie Weis' Irish will be sophomore...Tags: Michigan, Defense, Armed Forces
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TE Rudolph only freshman starter on new Irish depth chart
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Generally, college football depth charts that look like the cast credits for "Romper Room" do not bode well. Youth movements usually trend one way: Down. Eight freshmen started at some point for Notre Dame in 2007, and it did not...Tags: Students, Football, Teaching and Learning
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Only 1 freshman starter for Irish
Tribune staff reporterGenerally, college football depth charts that look like the cast credits for "Romper Room" do not bode well. Youth movements usually trend one way: Down. Eight freshmen started at some point for Notre Dame in 2007, and it did not turn out well. An...Tags: Students, Football, Teaching and Learning
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Options market in Irish backfield
Chicago Tribune reporterSOUTH BEND, Ind. — Typically, time-share presentations are as scintillating as burnt toast, but at least the attendees choose to be there. When Notre Dame introduced its 2007 recruiting class and in effect announced its backfield would be no one'...Tags: Football
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Irish facing plenty of issues on both sides
Chicago Tribune reporterAs Notre Dame opens training camp Friday, there is no question about this: If someone should ask Charlie Weis to reflect on the mudslide that was a 3-9 season in 2007, the Irish coach will treat the query like a wayward spider in the kitchen. He will...Tags: August, Football
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Reviews: 'In Hazard,' 'Erotomania' and more
Los Angeles TimesIN HAZARD, by Richard Hughes. New York Review Books, 224 pp., $14.95. Hughes' second novel, written after "A High Wind in Jamaica" and first published in 1938, tells how a ship, the Archimedes, equipped with the best modern technology, is smitten by a...Tags: Natural Resources, Salman Rushdie, Disasters, Charles Bukowski, Natural Disasters
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Northport neighbors fight over pool at historic site
Newsday Staff WriterFor the owners of the Breeze Hill Stock Farm in Northport, plans to install a new swimming pool have been anything but a breeze. The projected 18-by-40-foot pool -- designed to fit near the property's historic barn -- was approved by the Town of...Tags: Land Price, House Building, Architecture
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True New Yorker
About two years ago, when rats came down from a lowquat tree and began scratching around and scuttling around in the crawl space beneath our Venice home, I made my wife laugh (and wince) by reading to her from Joseph Mitchell's classic 1944 New Yorker...Tags: Natural Resources, Family, Defense, Disasters, Book
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Artist mixed paint, sculpture, cast-offs
Times Art CriticRobert Rauschenberg, the protean artist from small-town Texas whose imaginative commitment to hybrid forms of painting and sculpture changed the course of American and European art between 1950 and the early 1970s, died Monday night, according to New...Tags: San Marino, Plymouth, Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns, Defense
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Dramatist Donald Margulies sees the stage in a fresh light
Special to The TimesMore than a quarter century ago, the critic Robert Hughes called the public's response to Modern art "the shock of the new." The role of art was to stimulate ideas, provoke thought, challenge ways of seeing. Today, we are experiencing a different,...Tags: Consumer Electronics Industry, Frank Wedekind, Family, James Frey, Food and Dining Culture
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Kitschy Jeff Koons still a puzzle
The Washington PostWhat is Jeff Koons thinking? It's a puzzle that hides in plain sight, like string theory, like Larry King's hair. Koons gives us dazzling objects -- a garish porcelain sculpture of Michael Jackson and his pet monkey, an enormous metal bunny that looks...Tags: Auction Service, Venice, New York, Sculpture, Metal and Mineral
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Saving Coltrane's 'castle'
gene.seymour@newsday.comEven now, with its walls stripped bare, its chipped basement walls showing the effects of water damage, and its frayed and stained carpeting, it's still possible to see John Coltrane's house in Dix Hills as what it was -- and what it could become....Tags: Louis Armstrong, Health and Safety at School, Music Industry, Martin Luther King Jr., New York
Aug 28, 2008
|Story| Hampton Roads Daily Press
Aug 26, 2008
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Aug 25, 2008
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Aug 13, 2008
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Aug 7, 2008
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Aug 10, 2008
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Aug 4, 2008
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Jul 20, 2008
|Story| Los Angeles Times
May 14, 2008
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Sep 23, 2007
|Story| Los Angeles Times
Nov 27, 2007
|Story| Chicago Tribune
Jan 22, 2008
|Story| Newsday
