Word: editorialã
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...Wrath of the RIAA” (Apr. 18), which sets forth the same tired and incorrect arguments about the modern music industry that have become popular among its critics. While we appreciate The Crimson’s (obligatory) shared concern for the protection of intellectual property rights, the editorial??s characterization of our relationship with technology is terribly out of tune...
Perhaps the only institution to emerge sparkling clean from Orange Crushed is The Crimson, which Nikki Chase lauds for its “tightly argued editorial?? on the living wage issue. In the novel, Butch Hubbard, the flamboyant, hyperactive chair of Harvard’s African and African-American Studies Department, grants this newspaper an interview. We can only hope that Thomas-Graham—who pulled out of a telephone talk with The Crimson scheduled for last Thursday morning—will follow Hubbard’s lead...
...editorial??s omission of relevant information was also surprising. Particularly notable was the editorial??s failure to reference HUPD’s repeated offers to consider with The Crimson whether it would be appropriate to expand the substantial information about campus safety and security already made available to the Harvard community. Also excluded was any mention that I am in the process of forming an advisory group to examine these issues—a group in which The Crimson has been asked to participate. The Crimson knew of the formation of this committee almost a week...
...then, that Freud’s idea about jokes is eminently applicable to the YDN’s April Fools gesture, which marks not so much an innovation in content, but rather one in form; an ironical joke has been substituted for what had already been stated in straightforward editorial??and news—form several months earlier...