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When we spoke last week, she was driving from Pennsylvania to New York to compete in the New York Song Writer’s Circle (she won Grand Prize.) It’s another notch in her belt, which also includes a recent semifinalist position in Cosmopolitan magazine??s Star Launch competition and a Starbucks Emerging Artist Award...
...True, with featured alumni like Tommy Lee Jones ’69, Al Gore ’69, and (sort of) Bill Gates, “You could cover politics, finance, the arts, architecture, really anything.”Still, there were skeptics who believed that the magazine??s focus was too narrow. Alumnus Stephen P. Younger ’77, who received the magazine free of charge for its first year, says, “It was a very interesting, people-oriented magazine. It was high quality and good content, and had features that I found...
...what he describes as a “change in and loss of personnel” that led to a recent merger with Boston-based Whats Up magazine??which became a supplement in Spare Change– Eck said that the paper has alienated a member of the Buffet family who previously donated $40,000 a year to the publication...
...Daniel M. Loss ’00, published seven issues under its first owner, The Atlantic Monthly, before being sold to Manhattan Media in May 2008. The founders’ involvement with 02138 ended shortly after the magazine changed owners. Manhattan Media significantly altered the magazine??s focus, according to David J. Blum, the new editor in chief of 02138. “We were redesigning the entire magazine basically from scratch,” Blum said. Although it still addressed an audience of Harvard alumni, 02138 tried to focus more on issues of national interest, according...
Thank you so much for your publication of “The Harvard 100,” where you feature famous and influential Harvard alumni, particularly those who have truly contributed something to the world (like Matt P. Damon, number 70, who was also People magazine??s sexiest man alive in 2007). In past years, however, you seem to have left out several key contributors to society (though you managed to include Harvard’s most treasured Golden Boy—President George W. Bush, number 2)—on the list. In order to avoid...