As mentioned below, Larry Summers is in Utah skiing this holiday weekend.

Doesn’t much sound like him, does it? So let’s consider what this really means. Possibilities include:

1) This ski weekend was long-planned and Summers saw no point in canceling it.

2) Summers is under a lot of pressure and hastily decided to get away from campus. Which would be understandable.

3) Summers is pulling a Washington move, trying to look relaxed and above the fray by going on vacation.

4) Summers is giving Harvard a raised middle finger to the effect of, “Do what you want, I’m outta here.”

Option #1 is what Summers’ apologists John Longbrake and Steve Hyman are selling. That argument is complicated by the fact that Summers blew off a meeting with the Institute of Politics fellows and an announcement with the mayor of Boston regarding Allston developments.

The IOP meeting suggests that Mass Hall is really, really screwed up right now. These people can not get their stories straight.

According to one IOP fellow who e-mailed the Crimson, “We were told he had a meeting that ran long.”

Which turned out to mean that Summers had already gone skiing. (Evidence of option #4, to my mind.) Which means that someone just lied to the IOP.

The existence of that excuse does suggest that Summers was planning on going to the meeting until he decided to go skiing. (Options 2, 3 and 4.)

If the ski trip was long-planned, why was the IOP meeting on Summers’ schedule at all?

“I made the mistake,” Summers’ spokesman John Longbrake told the Crimson.

Huh. So the president’s press secretary is also his scheduler? I don’t think so.

Longbrake needs to be very careful lest he join the long list of people whose integrity and career have suffered after close professional association with Larry Summers. He’s clearly falling on his sword , trying to take responsibility for Summers’ apparently last-minute decision to blow off the K-School meeting by claiming it was a scheduling snafu.

Longbrake has had good relations with the press by trying to be forthcoming and not trying to spin the unspinnable, as his predecessor, Lucie McNeil, did. (McNeil’s once-promising career: severely damaged by working for Summers.)

Don’t ruin it now, John. When this mess is all over, no one’s going to remember that you were loyal to Summers—except, perhaps, the people who don’t like him—and you’ll have to live with the fact that you compromised yourself.

Steve Hyman, who says that Summers was not at the Allston event because the timing of it was dictated by Mayor Tom Menino’s schedule, is too far gone to be saved. That excuse is laughable—not least because Summers and Menino don’t much care for each other, and Harvard wouldn’t want to snub the mayor by, say, calling him up and saying that Larry Summers can’t come to a joint announcement because he’s in Utah skiing.

A year ago, Summers checked out of the curricular review. Is he now doing the same with Allston?

More evidence of option #4…

Which, don’t get me wrong, is far from a sign that Summers plans to resign. More likely he’s daring Harvard to fire him….. Does Summers have something on members of the Corporation? Something that he’s threatening to leak, if he’s not happy with the outcome of this controversy?