Word: editor-in-chief
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Niles Chubb '48 continues as Editor-in-Chief of the mimeographed paper, but much of the actual production will be taken care of by two new editors and a staff which will be listed for the first time in Friday's issue...
...first time this summer, Freshmen will be given the opportunity to try out for a College publication tonight at 7:30 o'clock when candidates for the positions of Editor-in-Chief and Business Manager of the 1946 Register will be welcomed to the initial meeting in the Adams House Upper Common Room...
Revisions were handled by Editor-in-Chief Irene Watson, an 18-year-old graduate of Brooklyn's Bay Ridge High School, who received $13.60 a week for her services, and realized no more clearly than the authors that she was helping run a roto-lactor. Some 40 other high-school kids, delighted to be in the publishing game at similar wages, sent out Mr. Flumiani's oleaginous form letters. The "season paragraph" told the author that the time (any old time) was ripe to bursting for his book to appear. The "fighting paragraph" bucked...
Publisher Hoyt entirely separated the news departments and editorial page, setting the Oregonian's editorialists entirely apart. The Oregonian now has no editor-in-chief, and Managing Editor Robert Not-son never crosses the editorialists' path. Its three editorialists...
However, we do not feel that publications should be considered as "official" in any sense of the term. The author, the board of editors, and the editor-in-chief should be responsible for what goes in each article, not the entire student body. All three were at fault for failing to see the potential dynamite that lurked in the seeming innocence of the words. When the dynamite exploded it was up to them to make amends as best they could. We suspect that the apologies which they rendered, honestly and sincerely, must have helped the situation more than any action...