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Reischauer has written many books on Asian history, including "Japan The Story of a Nation." "The Japanese," and "East Asia Tradition and Transformation," which he coauthored with Higginson Professor of History John K. Fairbank...

Author: By Stephen L. Davis, | Title: Reischouer's Condition Stuble After Move to Local Hospital | 5/6/1983 | See Source »

Among the first to advocate a modern italic as the basis for handwriting reform was the English calligrapher Alfred Fairbank. His series of books, written with Charlotte M. Store and published in 1957, starts children off with simple zigzag lines to harness their natural sense of rhythm. As children draw faster, they will round off the zigs and zags either on top or bottom. Then they are taught to turn rows of circles into slightly slanted ovals. If they alternate these ovals with equally slanted lines, they have all the basic components of lower-case italic letters (and,incidentally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: Reforming with Zigs and Zags | 3/21/1983 | See Source »

...Chinabound, by John K. Fairbank...

Author: By Mary Humes and Rebecca J. Joseph, S | Title: The Leisure of the Theory Class | 5/26/1982 | See Source »

...SCHLESINGER honed the skills that-produced Bitter Fruit teaching expository writing to Harvard freshmen. A Law School student at the time. Schlesinger was a third--generation Harvard instructor: his father, Kennedy biographer Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. taught history in the yard, as did his grandfather. Arthur Sr. Anuncle, John K. Fairbank, recently retired from the Faculty. It was "a lot more grueling than I ever imagined." Stephen Schlesinger recalls of his stint grading papers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stephen Schlesinger | 5/4/1982 | See Source »

...These porgnant and too-infrequent commentaries reaffirm the importance of studying the land to which this man has donated his scholarship. Now that China has inundated America in the form of Bloomingdale oriental bazaars and tours of the Great Wall offered by our local travel agents, the impact of Fairbank's first writing can't be fully appreciated. Even when he takes up a familiar subject like footbinding, he continues to teach freshly...

Author: By Thomas H. Howlett, | Title: Fairbank's China Syndrome | 4/20/1982 | See Source »

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