Word: e-mailed
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...mother e-mail. But life before these blessed, though burdensome, conveniences did exist. Without daily doses of Dems-talk, Throp-talk, Newstalk, and innumerable other e-lists, it feels as though we would never be informed of campus’ most important (and, alas, unimportant) debates. Procrastination would become more creative, and we would certainly be ignorant of the uncouthly candor that is brought about by impersonal conversation. Without class e-mail lists, we would actually have to attend lecture to find out when our next assignment was due. Consulting teaching fellows about a troublesome paper would require face...
...Overseer Bruce M. Alberts ’60, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco, writes in an e-mail that he has noticed a change in the Board’s relationship with the Corporation...
...Corporation’s senior fellow, James R. Houghton ’58, writes in an e-mail that he does not foresee changes in the Overseers’ role “in any formal sense...
...Alberts explained in February that he had first learned of Summers’ decision from a New York Times reporter, but was contacted by a Corporation member shortly afterward. “This did not disturb me,” Alberts wrote in an e-mail, “as early notification of the Overseers would have likely caused the story to leak to the press prematurely...
...Corporation member Nannerl O. Keohane writes in an e-mail that she is “glad that we are working jointly on better communication between the two governing boards, since both boards will benefit from this...