The archives
Think Magazine from Fall/Winter 2008 to the present
Spring/Summer 2014
Featuring: Exploring the Brain Research teams pursuing a broad range of projects to better understand what lies within our skulls.
Fall/Winter 2013
Featuring: Thirty Under 30 A spotlight on outstanding young alumni, from the lab to the stage.
Spring/Summer 2013
Featuring: Fantastic Four. Accomplished young alumnae achieve national acclaim.
Fall/Winter 2012
Featuring: To the Next Big Thing Academia provides the tools that help budding entrepreneurs launch companies from campus.
Spring/Summer 2011
Featuring Pulling the Plug on Paper. physicians trade in their patients' file folders for electronic medical records , discovering a family secret in a trove of old letters and the downside to bedrest.
Fall/Winter 2010
Featuring Getting the Lead Out. Fifteen years after being effectively removed from the U.S. market, the prolific danger of leaded gasoline becomes clearer , a link between common blood pressure drugs and increased cancer risk and alum and famed geek Don Knuth talks computers, contests and pipe organs.
Spring/Summer 2010
Featuring Is Bad Taste the New Taste? Social Media is Changing Our Sense of What's Acceptable—and What's Not, expert arguments regarding healthcare reform, an interview with Mad Men actor and alum, Rich Sommer, and a new technology may help wheelchair-bound individuals to walk.
Fall/Winter 2009
Featuring The Digital Divide: Kindle DX makes a splash on campus with fans and critics, researchers taking stem cells back in time, an excerpt from bestselling author Thrity Umrigar's latest novel, and insights into why good-looking people are harder to draw with New Yorker cartoonist Tom Bachtell.
Spring/Summer 2009
Featuring Full Speed Ahead: The race is one to expand high-speed rail in the U.S., a new superbug targeting U.S. military men and women, strategies for change, and a chat with Alum and Warner Bros. CEO Barry Meyer.
Fall/Winter 2008
Inaugural issue, featuring Vanishing Act: How the universe is erasing evidence of its own origins, as well as stories from inside the trial of Saddam Hussein, the truth about human trafficking, Alzheimer's research and more.
For more information about back issues of Case Western Reserve’s magazines (before Fall/Winter 2008), email think@case.edu.