Word: editors
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...first issue of Tract Magazine, which aspires to innovatively unite art and science, appeared last fall. “The hole here is not due to The Advocate or The Crimson being at fault,” says Henry M. Cowles ’08, an inactive Crimson arts editor and Tract’s outgoing editor-in-chief. “Tract is not going to rise to the prominence or readership or recognition of these ‘Big Three.’ That’s not really the goal. We’re just providing...
...Bomb editor-in-chief Martabel Wasserman ’10 holds similar sentiments for her own magazine. “We are filling a hole in the media of the college,” she says. “We are not trying to compete with any existing voices.” The relatively recent appearence of the Cinematic, Freeze, and Present! can be explained by similar desires to satisfy niche markets with their exclusive coverage of—respectively—film, fashion, and anarchist...
...Tuesday was supposed to capture a slice of intellectual life here at Harvard.” says Caroline A. Bleeke ’10, co-editor of the magazine. “It’s catered to people with good ideas: we edit works to create publishable pieces.” Its annual issue hovers around 30-40 pages, which means The Gamut can similarly afford to publish a wide variety of poetry. Co-editor of the journal Liza D. Flum ’10 refers to her publication as less a competitor and more a supplement...
...However, the HBR was not strictly established as a forum for literary criticism but also as a community for writers. “One thing we try to foster is a wide variety of styles,” says Marta M. Figlerowitz ’09, the former fiction editor of The Advocate and current HBR editor-in-chief. “We are aiming towards something that can be read leisurely but that isn’t too compressed. The niche between purely academic and purely creative is a good one to explore...
...main thing I am focusing on for the next semester at least is getting people to advertise with us,” says Rich S. Beck ’09, a Crimson arts editor and editor-in-chief of Cinematic. “It’s hard to get started, when you bring them [the advertisers] an issue with no ads in it. We need to convince them that we are going to be around.” In order to stay competitive, Cinematic sells advertisements on its back cover for half as much as The Advocate...