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With that in mind, we launch today a new feature: a bi-weekly editor’s column, where we will address various issues, questions, and concerns, on the level of both individual stories and broader coverage and policy. This space will allow us to explain to you, our readers, why we make the decisions we make—whether to print the name of a student arrested on drug charges, use an anonymous source, or to maintain a strict wall between our news reporting and opinion pages. And it will ensure that we operate with the transparency and accountability...
...assiduous reporters, backed by the paper’s 133-year legacy, ensure that most readers do pick up the paper each morning with a basic assumption of truth. But the peaceful slumbers of complacency are never far off, and I hope this column will provide us with a bi-weekly opportunity to recommit ourselves to the truth...
...social space, the Foundation, this women’s center, the BGLTSA Resource Center, [and] prayer space for religious groups that need a Yard-centric location... what message does that send?”To clarify, Chadbourne was referencing the Harvard Foundation for Race and Intercultural Relations, and the Bi-sexual, Gay, Lesbian, Transgendered, and Supporters Alliance resource center. Chadbourne’s question was rhetorical, so he didn’t answer it. I’ll give it a shot. If the Yard basements were reserved mainly for targeted support centers, then that would send the message that...
...Arts and Sciences (GSAS) only sees Harvard’s president twice during their long stay at Harvard—once when they are welcomed to Harvard and once when they graduate. And only half of graduate students even see the president in the welcoming ceremony, since he alternates bi-annually with the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences as the keynote speaker. The absence of the University’s president at such an important juncture leaves the impression that he or she is uninterested in the graduate student body. This must change, starting with the coming...
...member of the Cambridge Public Schools Committee compared a Mass. law mandating that children in public schools recite the pledge of allegiance every day to a “post-9/11 ultra patriotism push”—and refuses to recite it himself before bi-weekly committee meetings...