Word: telling
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...course, lots of these people wanted to get hurt," Pusey says. "They were trying to act like they were being brutalized, but Dean Ebert [of the Medical School] was there, and he could tell you there was no brutality of any kind. I think there was one girl that jumped out the window and may have broken an arm or something like that, but I don't think anybody else ever went to the infirmary. The reports of violence were just not true. There was no violence at all. The police just pushed you, they just trucked them right down...
...They just didn't tell things honestly for a while, so we just had to find some other way to get the documents out where people could read what was actually written or said," says President Emeritus Nathan M. Pusey '28, referring to The Crimson's reporting in the late 1960s. "And that's why we founded the Gazette...
...Harvard Crimson drove ahead, oblivious to unpopularity and disdain, determined to tell the truth as they saw it, no matter who they offended," Kelman wrote...
...point is that The Crimson didn't adopt its new pro-SDS line because of a duty to tell the truth regardless of fear of favor. It did so because a majority of the editors of the Crimson were incurable intellectual conformists, shifting with amazing sensitivity with what they sensed as the dominant currents...
Nearly every undergraduate has a horror story to tell about teaching fellows, but even if many of these stories are exaggerated, they do reflect problems in the way Harvard teaches...