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Word: post-war (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...hard for current undergraduates to appreciate that in the post-war era, the link between freedom and democracy and learning was more appreciated. It's hard to recapture that in the more professionalized academic climate today," Swidler says...

Author: By Rachel P. Kovner, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Bellah Challenges Academia's Limits | 6/1/1998 | See Source »

With the global conflict of World War II fresh in their minds, post-war Harvard students and Faculty grappled daily with international issues from communism to world federalism, arms technology to European reconstruction, arguing with the same intensity with which today's students debate identity politics or affirmative action...

Author: By Caitlin E. Anderson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: International Issues Dominate Student Debate | 6/1/1998 | See Source »

...slow conversion. A semester after Secretary of State George C. Marshall presented his historic European Recovery Plan in Tercentenary Theater, Harvard had only begun to acclimate to the post-war...

Author: By Andrew K. Mandel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Men to Boys: Making Movies and Memorials | 6/1/1998 | See Source »

...about in this tabloid age. Bogart, additionally, is reason enough to watch. Spot Mr. Howell and Ed Begley Jr.'s father, and you get a gold star. Try The Paper (1994), co-penned (and cameoed in) by current TIME editor Stephen Koepp, if you've got to see something post-war, but please, please don't rent I Love Trouble, unless you really do. Because CP will find out where you live...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stop The Potatoes! | 4/17/1998 | See Source »

...produces and artificial, superficial diversity. It demeans blacks and Hispanics by saying that the essence of their being is their skin color, that the diversity they bring is literally skin deep. It treats them as an undifferentiated and homogeneous mass, characterized by Orwellian groupthink of the sort that post-war intellectuals said would never exist and that present-day intellectuals seem all too eager to abet...

Author: By Thomas B. Cotton, | Title: Defining Diversity Down | 3/18/1998 | See Source »

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