Word: columnizing
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Nader R. Hasan ’02 is a government concentrator in Lowell House. His column appears on alternate Wednesdays...
...friends at Princeton report much more contact with faculty and advisers, and the record of Princeton on financial aid and the social lives of the students is far superior to Harvard’s. More important, I am sending a check to Princeton and writing about it in my column to make clear two points that bear repeating. One, there is a correlation between undergraduates’ perception of the administration’s intentions and future financial support from those same undergraduates turned alumni. Two, giving to educational and other charitable causes is and should be a competitive market...
Alex F. Rubalcava ’02 is a government concentrator in Eliot House. His column appears on alternate Wednesdays...
CASV member Sarah B. Levit-Shore ’04 focused on the Independent column, “Scared to Celibacy: Why Harvard’s sex life is so quiet,” by William J. Wright ’03 and the publication’s choice of photos and captions. She said captions such as “Oops, I did it again,” trivialized the issue of rape and demonstrated the need for better sexual assault education...
...shabby, venal or self-important as the cast of Evelyn Waugh's Scoop, the 1937 novel that is still the most hilarious depiction of foreign correspondents and their publishers in the grip of a vigorous incomprehension of just about everything. In the book William Boot, who writes a nature column for a British newspaper called the Beast - composing sentences like "Feather-footed through the plashy fen passes the questing vole" - is recruited by mistake to join a collection of journalistic mountebanks and hacks in covering coup and countercoup in the fictional African land of Ishmaelia. Much has changed in journalism...