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...placed at the University of Massachusetts at Columbia Point. Most of the objections to the complex by Cambridge tenants are considered benefits by the residents of Columbia Point Furthermore, the University of Massachusetts would gain much more from the complex than would Harvard from the split version. ALLEN DENNISON '74.5 Guy Gillespie...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SCHISMATICS | 5/27/1975 | See Source »

...only one model and has marketed that for only about two years, IBM is believed already to be No. 3 in the field, behind Xerox and 3M. (Its gains, however, seem to have come at the expense of such concerns as 3M, Addressograph Multigraph, SCM, Sperry Rand and Dennison, rather than Xerox, which retains three-fourths of the global copier market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Great IBM-Xerox Race | 9/4/1972 | See Source »

...troublesome minority than the Croats of Yugoslavia. Dour and resentful, they have felt themselves second-class citizens in their own land for a thousand years, first under the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires, and more recently under Yugoslavia's more numerous Serbs.* As a result, says Balkan Historian Dennison I. Rusinov, the Croats "have a case of permanent national paranoia," which has made Croatia a center of conflict and division at home, and a source of violent agitation for nearly every European country that has imported Yugoslav workers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: YUGOSLAVIA: Conspiratorial Croats | 6/5/1972 | See Source »

...public school. Because the parents of girls from town believe that a woman can live her life with the brains of a hen, only boys attend the school, which the authors acknowledge as "racism." However, like Herbert Kohl's sixth grade children in Harlem or the children in George Dennison's First Street School in lower Manhattan, the students improve when instructional flexibility, Individual encouragement, and a stress on group development are substituted for the rigidity, anonymity, and competitiveness of public schools...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: The Voices of Children | 4/15/1972 | See Source »

...movement for reform in America's schools has attracted increasing momentum through the 1960s, chiefly thanks to a number of writers like John Holt, Herbert Kohl, and George Dennison who have dramatized areas of inhumane and unthinking practice as well as various attempts at reform in the classroom. Now, "integrated day," "informal school," and "open classroom" have become as familiar as the jargon growing out of the work of John Dewey and the Progressive Movement. Unfortunately, the Progressives left behind little more in practice than jargon. Advocates of reform along the lines of informal schooling fear that without painstaking attention...

Author: By Peter M. Shane, | Title: Reform in Practice | 3/25/1972 | See Source »

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