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The Monday Morning Memo

During the first of the modern Olympic Games
held under the auspices of the IOC (in the Panathenaic stadium
in Athens in 1896) 14 nations came together and 241 athletes
competed in 43 events, one of which was “Step Dancing,”
commonly called Irish Dancing today. The competition was
discontinued the following year due to a formal protest from Great Britain.

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Random Quote:

“IN THE GUGGENHEIM
Suddenly, as she lurched backward from one especially explosive painting, her high heels were tricked by the slope, and she fell against me and squeezed my arm. Ferocious gumbos splashed on one side of us; the siren chasm called on the other. She righted herself but did not let go of my arm. Pointing my eyes ahead, inhaling the presence of perfume, feeling like a cliff-climber whose companion has panicked on the sheerest part of the face, I accommodated my arm to her grip and, thus secured, we carefully descended the remainder of the museum. Not until our feet touched the safety of street level were we released. Our bodies separated and did not touch again.”

- John Updike, extracted from Museums and Women, written for The New Yorker, Nov. 18, 1967.

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