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...student tried to find out how a fridge worked, ruptured the machine’s gas pipe and had to be rescued by the fire department. 4/23: Harvard, MIT get largest electron accelerator in the world. Costing $6.5 million, the project will be completed by 1960. 5/7: Robert B. Woodward, Loeb professor of chemistry, synthesized reserpine, an important drug in the treatment of mental disorders. One day later, the student council proposes a new student activity center.6/1: Dean of Freshmen bans the freshman smoker. 73 percent of freshman have poor teeth, according to James M. Duning, director of the hygiene...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Timeline: 1956 In Review | 6/3/2006 | See Source »

...said. “I have no clue what I’ll do without softball. I’ll miss the friends. [The game] was fun. It was a fun day.” McAteer and the Crimson’s four other senior players, Halpenny, Adams, Cara Woodward and Rachel Murray, were all honored in a pre-game ceremony. Walking off Soldiers Field in a Harvard uniform for the last time, Adams had a positive yet teary-eyed remembrance of her Crimson career. “It was all fun,” Adams said...

Author: By Courtney M. Petrouski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Bats Fall Silent, Pitching Falters in Season-Ending Loss | 5/8/2006 | See Source »

...department stores were boring, the service nonexistent and the merchandise ubiquitous without being interesting. "Department stores have lost sight of their customer. It's that simple," says Janet Hoffman, a San Francisco--based retail strategist for Accenture. Sales tumbled, and chain after chain of historic, family-owned retailers--Gimbels, Woodward & Lothrop, Wanamaker's, Montgomery Ward--closed their doors or were swallowed up by stronger companies. In 1980, about 35 major department-store chains were in business; today there are only 13. The merger is the category's last-gasp effort to save itself. "It represents the best chance to stop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Department-Store Superstar | 2/6/2006 | See Source »

...right-hand man--is not, in the end, a good idea. Baseball players with necks the size of most people's thighs were shocked to discover that we were on to them. Saddam Hussein found himself in a court that he didn't control. Even the journalistic giant Bob Woodward realized that he still worked for a newspaper to whose readers he remained--yes!--accountable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Year We Questioned Authority | 12/19/2005 | See Source »

...reporters barraged the White House last week with renewed questions on the CIA leak case, one of the Washington press corps’ own may have been holding on to a key part of the mystery.Bob Woodward, the Washington Post’s distinguished reporter and associate managing editor, has already faced scrutiny for his role in the disclosure of Valerie Plame’s undercover status at the CIA. But in a conversation at Harvard earlier this month, Woodward hinted that he knows the identity of yet another key player in the case: Robert D. Novak?...

Author: By Zachary M. Seward, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Woodward Said Novak's Source "Was Not in the White House" | 12/19/2005 | See Source »

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