Word: editor-in-chief
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Since its start in 1972, Ms. Magazine has received an overwhelming response from its readers, Pat Carbine, publisher and editor-in-chief of the magazine, said yesterday, nothing that over 20,000 readers responded to the first issue alone. The first letter published--which Carbine read aloud at the press conference--was a response to an article by Horner entitled "Why I Fear Success," she added...
Mitchell W. Goldman, editor-in-chief of The Justice, said yesterday the newspaper, which has never before requested access to police files, asked for the information in order to design a map of "trouble spots" at Brandeis...
...still published in Russia. In 1968 she was arrested for demonstrating in Red Square against the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia and was later placed in a psychiatric institution--a familiar ordeal for a Soviet dissident. After her release, Garbanevskaya emmigrated to Paris, where she is now the editor-in-chief of "Memory," a Russian literary journal...
...York University Law Review (New York University): The selection process at NYU is undergoing a "transition," according to outgoing editor-in-chief Nancy Morawetz. In the most recent class, about ten editors selected solely on writing comp performance, about 15 solely on grades, and about 15 weighting both equally. NYU has also just instituted a "publishable note program" similar to the Yale system. But Morawetz says that because NYU is a larger school than Yale, students will be expected to the initiative receiving less assistance from current editors in preparing their notes. Affirmative action was discussed last year, she adds...
University of Pennsylvania Law Review (University of Pennsylvania): Two-thirds of the editors are chosen on the basis of grades, the other third through a writing competition. Last spring, according to outgoing editor-in-chief Marcie Horowitz, the review editors decided they wanted to start an affirmative action program, and sent a letter to students and faculty. "There was a great uproar," Horowitz says minority student groups indicated they opposed the idea, and the faculty kept silent. "It was a pretty negative reception, so we decided to give it up," Horowitz says. "The topic will probably come up again...