Word: editor
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Fain touts the ship as a "city at sea," but that comes with some of the attendant problems. "The possibility of crime goes up, costs go up, and it gets more crowded," says Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of Cruisecritic.com Royal Caribbean says on-board crime is rare, but hired a former top FBI official to run its security operations. Competitors warn that a ship this big can spoil a cruise destination. "Some ports just won't support 4,000 guests," says Bill Smith, vice president of Crystal Cruises, whose ships have no more than 1,000 passengers. "At that size...
...surprised that he did the voices,” Pablo A. Torres ’06, who is also a Crimson editor, said, adding that the characters’ voices sounded the same over a microphone as they do on the show...
...said Greenhouse to raucous laughter. “I could tell you that the Supreme Court may be our last, best hope, but I’m a journalist who after all are not suppose to have opinions.” Instead, Greenhouse, who is also a former Crimson editor, instructed the future lawyers—some, as she noted, future Supreme Court law clerks—about the “10 Things I’ve Learned While Covering the Supreme Court.” Beneath the courtroom’s high-ceiling rafters, graduates, friends and family...
...Columbia in 1956, Lehrer enlisted in a three-year stint in the U.S. Marine Corps. Upon returning, he began his professional career working for The Dallas Morning News, and he later joined the staff of The Dallas Times-Herald. At 34, Lehrer became the paper’s city editor...
...Lampoon say she is “both terrifying and exhilarating” in her writing style and personality. “Lizzie is a free bird,” says ‘Poonster Monica L. Padrick ’06. Today, Widdicombe, who is also a Crimson editor, will look to entertain the audience with her own impressions of her Harvard experience. The speech is “a reflection of who I am and things that I have observed about Harvard,” says Widdicombe. “It is a very strange place that...