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...mail message, Lewis wrote that I am misinterpreting his letter, and admittedly, I haven’t been totally fair to his argument. His letter was not intended to specifically advocate being more social on campus. His generally wise advice was to encourage us to spend more time exploring pursuits we love at our leisure. So, when I asked him where he thinks students should spend this unstructured free time, he wrote in an e-mail message, “Did I really need to put more structure on the notion of unstructuredness in order to be helpful...

Author: By Robert J. Fenster, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Space to Slow Down | 10/3/2001 | See Source »

...President Bush faced a transcendent challenge Thursday night, to address a nation in all its grief and anger and confusion over what comes next. It's hard to plan D-day against an enemy with no beaches and no borders, and when wise heads counsel that the most effective counterattack may be the least publicly satisfying kind--the quiet intelligence and financial and psychological warfare that can best "drain the swamp" where the terrorists hide. Would a large-scale attack demonstrate American resolve or play into the hands of those hoping to create a martyr? "Not only do you need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life On The Home Front | 10/1/2001 | See Source »

...foundation is in place, all that is needed is a leadership that can bring together the parts in a purposeful, wise and calibrated way. The President's speech gave cause for hope. We have had no end of a lesson. But it is the mark of a great nation that it can learn a lesson, pick itself up and continue the fight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No End of a Lesson | 10/1/2001 | See Source »

...President Bush faced a transcendent challenge Thursday night, to address a nation in all its grief and anger and confusion over what comes next. It's hard to plan D-day against an enemy with no beaches and no borders, and when wise heads counsel that the most effective counterattack may be the least publicly satisfying kind - the quiet intelligence and financial and psychological warfare that can best "drain the swamp" where the terrorists hide. Would a large-scale attack demonstrate American resolve or play into the hands of those hoping to create a martyr? "Not only do you need...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life on the Home Front | 10/1/2001 | See Source »

President Lawrence H. Summers is centrally placed to restore, reform and remake Harvard—a responsibility that requires his own best intentions and calls upon the wise counsel of the rest of the University. As my own time as an undergraduate winds down, I’d like to share with him the one fundamental insight that I have distilled from my Harvard experience, a sentiment I happen to share with many others who have passed through here. I feel strongly that if any one truth, one iota of Veritas, should guide Harvard under his administration, it should...

Author: By Trevor Cox, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Serving Up a Better Harvard | 9/27/2001 | See Source »

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