Word: contentment
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...that appear on the upper left-hand side of the editorial page each day, and signed op-eds, comments, columns, letters, and artwork that appear elsewhere. As an editorial board, we have two primary tasks: First, we comprise the bulk of the Crimson editors who debate the content of staff editorials (see more on staff editorials below), and second, we solicit and edit signed content...
Staff editorials appear under the banner of “The Crimson Staff,” because all Crimson editors are welcome to share their views when we decide what the content of staff editorials should be. Three times a week, the editorial board co-chairs hold meetings open to all Crimson editors, where, as a group, we decide which topics to write about and what opinions we will publish on those topics. After discussion, a vote is taken, and if a simple majority of the editors present agree on a particular opinion, we will write a staff editorial...
...Signed content...
...case, signed pieces do not necessarily reflect the views of the editorial board. In fact, we tend to give our writers, especially our columnists and editorial cartoonists, a substantial amount of free reign in choosing their topics; we value clarity and originality of an argument over the particular content of the argument itself...
...charts, a series of drawings or photographs, or other graphics. Your submission must, however, still make an original argument or convincing point. If your op-ed is chosen for publication, an editor will contact you to start the editing process. Though you will always have final say over the content of your op-ed, we reserve the right to write headlines and choose illustrations to accompany your op-ed (normally, our writers do not write their own headlines either). Lastly, no article is ever guaranteed publication—even the articles that we solicit...