Word: editors
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...made the first part of the prophecy come true; the cyclone fulfilled the second half. Holed up in their jungle capital, the generals escaped the wrath of the cyclone. "People I've spoken to back in Burma say they're angry at two things," says Aung Zaw, the Irrawaddy editor. "First, they're angry at the military for reacting so slowly. And second, they're angry at the cyclone for missing Naypyidaw." The long-suffering Burmese can only hope that divine intervention will not be so kind to the generals next time...
...made the first part of the prophecy come true; the cyclone fulfilled the second half. Holed up in their jungle capital, the generals escaped the wrath of the cyclone. "People I've spoken to back in Burma say they're angry at two things," says Aung Zaw, The Irrawaddy editor. "First, they're angry at the military for reacting so slowly. And second, they're angry at the cyclone for missing Naypyidaw and keeping the generals safe...
...Christopher B. Lacaria ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, is a history concentrator in Kirkland House. His column appears regularly...
Brian S. Chen ’10, a Crimson editorial editor, is a social studies concentrator in Eliot House...
...seemingly elevated it to the status of a new—albeit somewhat accidentally created—genre. Online, the new culture is “doing a billion things all at the same time,” according J.D. Connor ’92, a former Crimson editor. And yes, the popular bits culled from the billion often turn out to be as ridiculous as two minutes of a laughing baby, or a fat kid imitating “Star Wars,” or Tay Zonday singing “Chocolate Rain...