-
Duveen's secret was to mark out which of his American collector-clients would be bestowed the honour of being allowed to buy a painting or sculpture.
ECONOMIST: Flogging culture to Americans: The art of the deal | The
-
The director of the Secret Service, Mark Sullivan, decided the agents needed to be brought back to Washington, where they are based, immediately, Mr. King said.
WSJ: Secret Service Agents in Scandal Placed on Leave
-
Earlier Wednesday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano told the Senate Judiciary Committee that Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan has the full confidence of the president after the scandal.
CNN: Senators criticize military briefing on Colombia scandal
-
Across the Sunday political talk shows, officials expressed confidence in Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan, saying they believe he has handled the scandal well and will get answers.
CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS
-
On Friday, House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Peter King, R-New York, said he had more questions about the agency's internal review after meeting with Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan.
CNN: SHARE THIS
-
In his letter, Grassley noted that he had asked Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan whether any White House advance staffers had been involved but hadn't received an answer by Monday.
CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS
-
When Dawn Giugliano woke up from an hour-long nap on a beach in Puerto Rico last year, the 27-year-old Long Islander claims she got quite a surprise: The metal ring attaching the cups of her Victoria's Secret bikini top had seared a mark in her chest.
FORBES: Magazine Article
-
Julia Pierson, formerly Secret Service chief of staff, will succeed Mark Sullivan, who announced last month that he would retire.
BBC: Obama names first woman head of US Secret Service
-
When it comes to creating the arrangements for his shows, Simons's secret weapon is 34-year-old Antwerp-based florist Mark Colle.
WSJ: Florist Mark Colle Springs Into Fashion
-
The rest it sucks into its system through contracts made with other diamond producers, and by dispatching its buyers, whose clipped British accents and pressed cotton shirts mark them out as the sort who might otherwise be employed by Her Majesty's secret service, to vacuum up diamonds that seep onto the market in such places as Angola and Congo-Kinshasa.
ECONOMIST: THE DIAMOND BUSINESS