Word: looks
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Like Janus, the two-faced god of the Romans, the Crimson is looking in both directions during the period preceding its straw vote (on the Roosevelt-Landon election) . . . editorials will appear by . . . two Crimson editorial writers of opposing views. The former tends to look in the general direction of Kansas; the latter veers toward Washington." (October...
...former editor of the paper, I send you hearty greetings on this memorable milestone. All who have had the opportunity of seeing the University through the CRIMSON's eyes have been especially privileged. To its editors is committed a trust. We all look forward with confidence to a continuing realization of that responsibility in the years to come...
Perhaps not so difficult, however, for a former editor who has been officially in and about the Yard for the greater part of those thirty years. His memories after all should be verdant with new annual growth. First, let us look at the modern counterpart of the old 1918 student. Today's undergraduate is a more mature, a better poised, and a must better informed person. No middle-aged academic official would take issue in that point. And it is a basic factor in the present trends of college journalism...
...good time to look hard at the services of the CRIMSON to the Harvard community and to its own editors. As our newsmen-turned-author and our learned committees tirelessly remind us, our society needs now, more than even before, the services of a free and alert press. We look to the CRIMSON and we see at once the virtually assured circulation, the regular, if not munificent, income; we know that by time-honored custom the paper is free from censorship; we see a daily published by able young men in a community given over to the fermentation of ideas...
...largely because it serves the special interests of a small class. In relation to the Harvard community, the CRIMSON is in a much happier position. It is not subject to directives from above, and it has no special interests to serve. Let the editors on this Seventy-fifth Anniversary look into their consciences and ask themselves if they are really making the most of their opportunities. They may never again have so good a chance to learn (and teach) what an honest and fearless press...