১৪ মে, ২০০৮

Today in 1968, blogged.

I continue blogging the past, and today's year — picked by a random number generator — is:
The opening of the Paris peace talks

Bobby Kennedy winning the Indiana primary and yelling at some Nebraska students

Linda LeClair living with her boyfriend and upsetting the Barnard College alumnae

৪টি মন্তব্য:

Bruce Hayden বলেছেন...

Well, for me it meant graduation from high school, three tickets in two weeks during that summer, and starting college.

When I got to college, we still had coats and ties for Sunday dinner. Mandatory chapel service had been dropped only a year or two before. The fraternities still had house mothers and there was no visitation between the sexes in the dorms (or officially the fraternity houses).

Within a year or so, all this had changed. We got inter-visitation that spring. The next year, I was the first male living in the freshman women's dorm. The coats and ties were dropped at the end of my freshman year since a lot of us were wearing them without shirts and with shorts and sandals.

Paddy O বলেছেন...

Here's the message I got back from the Times:

Thank you for contacting us. We hope you find the following information helpful.

Education Rate for Single Copies: K-12 and college educators, school librarians, college students, faculty and staff may subscribe to The New York Times at our reduced education rate for single copy delivery. Please call 1-888-698-2655.

K-12 Programs for Bulk School Delivery: To learn about our Newspaper in Education program for classroom use of The New York Times, and associated curriculum resources, please visit us online at www.nytimes.com/nie. Alternatively, you can call 1-800-631-1222.

College Programs: For information about subscriptions to The New York Times at reduced education rates for faculty classroom requirements, or for college readership programs, call us at 1-888-PROF-NYT (1-866-776-3698) or e-mail us at college@nytimes.com. Please visit www.nytimes.com/college for our Web site with extensive resources for college faculty and students.

Your satisfaction is very important to us and we thank you for your interest in The New York Times.

Ann Althouse বলেছেন...

Paddy, it seems they are answering the wrong question, but I'd suggest calling the phone number.

Paddy O বলেছেন...

Yeah, either answering the wrong question or doing what I've seen a fair amount of online responses doing. Giving the answer to the question they are willing to answer.

I'll try the number and see what happens.

And thanks for giving a little extra on these recent posts to help us through this Times blackout crisis.