Word: changeing
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...boasts an average member age of about 50 and an unusual concentration of college-educated men. There are brokers, lawyers and journalists with interests running from martial arts to organ music to the Masonic references of James Joyce, explored in black tie over wine and cigars. Says John Chang, 39, a lawyer active in local Democratic politics: "Maybe now that my generation is getting a little bit more established with families, they're getting interested in organizations that are beholden to certain moral values." Lodge 2, he says proudly, is simply "a good body of men." Adds his lodge brother...
...Elizabeth A.Kensinger '98, Iris Lan '98 and Daniel F. Mason'98, all of Lowell House; Jenny D. Berrien '98,James J. Choi '98, Hsuan L. Hsu '98 and Rern Lau'98, all of Mather House; Julia Raiskin '98 ofPforzheimer House; Cristian Pop-Eleches '98 ofQuincy House; Chen-chen Chang '98, Daniel M.Engber '98, Ellen Shustorovich '98, Aurelio A.Teleman '98 and Alex M. Zakaras '98, all ofWinthrop House...
...Crimson is a student-run volunteer newspaper, and these are the seemingly small errors which tend to get glossed over. Chang says, "We think we take the adequate measures to ensure that these errors don't happen more often. Even the Globe runs a couple of corrections every day. We put in more checkpoints than professional papers, because we have to." But too many small errors are adding up to big doubts about the credibility of the newspaper. And credibility is the biggest asset a newspaper can have. If a little more rigor, and perhaps even more checkpoints in editorial...
...much as having their names distorted in a public forum. A simple editorial policy of checking all names and class years against the student directory would solve the problem. At present, such checking is done only for names "that are likely to be misspelled," explains Managing Editor Andrew S. Chang...
Crimson executives respond that they do have executive editors who are assigned to specific beats like Science and Technology, City, College, Student Life or Faculty. However, only features are regularly edited by these beat editors. For daily stories, Chang says, "we have to work under extremely tight deadlines, and we just don't have the luxury of a publication with a longer production cycle." For example, if a speech event takes place at eight o'clock and the paper has to go to press in a matter of hours, then there is often no time to check all the facts...