I went on to Harvard and got very interested in computers and studying the earth's landscape.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
At Harvard, I worked for some time as a researcher in a lab for computer graphics and spatial analysis, which is one of the birthplaces for what we do.
I love history, cultural and religious studies, philosophy, photography and traveling.
As a journalist I'm comfortable doing library research, and I did a lot! I had a fellowship at Radcliff for a year which gave me access to the Harvard system.
I studied at Carnegie Mellon. I went there with a bunch of really, really talented kids.
I am interested in computers and technology, and art, photography, and design.
Soon after my degree, in 1958 I went to the United States to enlarge my experience and to familiarize myself with particle accelerators. I spent about one and a half years at Columbia University.
I was nerdy and really into computers. I was a good student until my senior year, when I started traveling and had a lot of absences.
I went to Carnegie Mellon.
I thought of computers as very low class. I thought of myself as a pure mathematician and was interested in partial differential equations and topology and things like that.
I had studied at Harvard and MIT astronomy and a lot about the heavens and the star system and so forth.