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...retrospect, Lehrer said those three years were “a life-changing experience.” In the military, he finally took his first plane ride and travelled outside the United States. Those experiences changed how he treated other people and viewed the rest of the world, he said...

Author: By Madeline W. Lissner, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Sunny Reception on Rainy Day for Summers' Farewell | 6/9/2006 | See Source »

...Computers were a scarce commodity for the Class of 1981. When I took Nat Sci 110, the introduction to computing course, we had to fight for terminal time at the Science Center to run our little training programs on the resident minicomputer. In retrospect, I think we must have been the last class in which everyone typed (and laboriously retyped) their theses and sniffed the vaguely intoxicating fumes of liquid paper. On return visits to campus in the early eighties I’d notice the steady proliferation of PCs (and later Macs). The tools we used to learn...

Author: By Scott A. Rosenberg | Title: From Typewriters to T1 | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...Retrospect Active Houses 20 Below and In the Shade A Year of Crimson Politicking Tired Typists

Author: By Adam M. Guren | Title: A Note From the Editorial Board | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

...Retrospect January 30, 1956 After four years of swimming in a national goldfish bowl, it is easy for the casual undergraduate to grow as indifferent to the changes within his Cambridge world as to development without. Perhaps, therefore, our readers will pardon the Crimson editors’ annual urge to review the past year’s developments before they depart from their notepad pinnacle for more academic file cards. Our only conclusion at such close range can be that it has been a good year for historians and for sorcerers, and that it has been a year of expansion...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: In Retrospect | 6/6/2006 | See Source »

...reflect the values of The New School seems undebatable. The school was founded in 1919 by philosopher John Dewey, historian Charles Beard and social commentator Thorstein Veblen, all of whom were deeply disillusioned by World War I and gave the school a pacifist streak that seems hopelessly naive in retrospect. Beard, best known as co-author with his wife, Mary, of An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution, which argued that the founders were operating more out of monetary self-interest than democratic ideals, went on to be a vocal critic of Franklin Roosevelt's efforts to help the Allies during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: McCain vs. the New School | 5/22/2006 | See Source »

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