Word: editor
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...should take his dishonest and––worse––indecorous antics to a more appropriate forum, The New York Times perhaps. His kind isn’t welcome on Fox News. Paul R. Katz ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, is a history and literature concentrator in Mather House...
...editors: Many thanks to The Crimson for its fine coverage of the shameful Chester Douglass scandal (“At the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, One Professor’s Fluoride Scandal Stinks,” magazine, Sept. 27). Harvard continues to stonewall and hope that the whole sorry mess will just go away. Clearly, the millions of dollars of National Institutes of Health money that Douglass has brought into Harvard’s coffers supersede the significance of a few hundred victims of bone cancer each year. Douglass, a known proponent of water fluoridation and editor...
...reached for comment last night.Fryer isn’t the only faculty member taking up a new role at the Institute. Visiting Professor of Af-Am and of Romance Languages and Literatures Francis A. Irele and Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences Tommie Shelby are the new editors of Transition Magazine, the Institute’s official publication. The current executive editor, Michael Vazquez, will be leaving for an editing job in India, according to Gates.“Transition is a magazine with a long and rich history, and we’re delighted to be able...
...trusted, that human beings are not always governed by reason. They can be very cruel." Ballard's wife, Mary, died of pneumonia in 1964, leaving him to raise their three children alone. For nearly 40 years, he has had the help and companionship of Claire Churchill Walsh, a magazine editor. For a writer of his talent and durability, Ballard has won oddly few honors. (A republican, he declined a Commander of the British Empire award in 2003.) Australian author and academic Germaine Greer once called him "a great writer who hasn't written a great novel." Fans would disagree, though...
...lived in Tallinn for a decade and speaks near-flawless Estonian. Like many Russian-born residents, she says she'd much rather live in Estonia than back in Russia. She's nibbling shrimp sandwiches in a hip private club called Noku with her friend Kertu Lukas, 25, the editor of an Estonian food magazine. For a while, Lukas had a Russian boyfriend. He spoke Estonian, but some of his family didn't; she speaks some Russian, but many of her friends don't. That was awkward sometimes and, she admits: "It was a problem for my father...