Word: edly
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...potentially serious liability issues to give the story to the media even before the President was informed. The disclosure that Cheney and his friends were hunting from their cars without proper licenses adds a smarmy exclamation point to another display of his arrogance and disregard for the law. Ed Vecchio Huber Heights, Ohio, U.S. The most disturbing excuse for the delay in reporting the accident to the public was that Cheney had no press officer with him. Why couldn't he write his own statement about something supposedly so straightforward? How could relaying facts be beyond his ability? If only...
Desperate freshman boys, you had your chance. Last Wednesday, in Leverett Dining Hall, nationally-distributed CO-ED Magazine and Harvard College-distributed Freeze Magazine joined forces and attracted a gaggle of stunning Harvard women, all there to compete to become the next Miss CO-ED model. Not surprisingly, FM identified himself as a Crimson reporter, and a chorus of young ladies politely declined comment. Lindsay N. Hart ’08 and L. Caroleene Hardee ’09, though, were pleased to chat. FM, noticeably flattered, discovered that the two students had heard about the audition from the Kappa...
...insightful, spirited debate about public policy, government, and the press,” said Alex S. Jones, director of the Shorenstein Center. Yesterday’s awards ceremony, held at the JFK Forum at the Kennedy School of Government, featured a special award presented to New York Times op-ed columnist Nicholas D. Kristof ’81, a former Crimson editor, for his reporting on the genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan. Many of Kristof’s columns on the crisis, which began appearing in the fall of 2004, exposed the crimes committed in Darfur through personal...
...likely someone already in Bush's inner circle, such as former Commerce Secretary Donald L. Evans; Budget Director Joshua B. Bolten; U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman; Karen Hughes, the Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs; or former Republican National Committee chairmen Marc F. Racicot and Ed Gillespie. Former Senator Dan Coats of Indiana, who helped with Bush's two Supreme Court confirmations, was also mentioned. A Republican official familiar with White House deliberations, while careful to stress that only the President knows what is going to happen, said: "If the President was going to bring...
...could have been much worse, according to the National Weather Service. "It was a highly unusual storm for this time of year and, and while it may not seem like it, we were actually extremely lucky," said senior meteorologist Ed Shimon. "Had the atmosphere been just a little more unstable, with this mix of cold and hot air, that instability could have spun up a storm like we saw in May of 1999 in Oklahoma City, when that city was just devastated. These were some of the strongest rotations I've ever seen...