Word: paged
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Crimson Criticized in Magazine Article" (April 2): I was disappointed by the bitter and condescending tone toward Justin C. Danilewitz '99, a Crimson editor, in response to an article written by Danilewitz in Commentary magazine concerning The Crimson's editorial page and shoot process...
...article focused on Danilewitz's unsuccessful bids for the position of editorial chair and for a column on the editorial page. As a long time reader of The Crimson's editorial page, I have respected Danilewitz's articles, even if I do not agree with everything he has written. That Danilewitz's editorials could cause a dissension of thought is a credit to The Crimson rather than a weakness. Not only is it interesting for readers to have the editorial page as a forum for all view-points; it is a necessity for free and open civic society and debate...
...backgrounds is incredibly important to any university newspaper claiming to represent the whole population, diversity is more than outward appearance. The Crimson would do well to note that a diversity of backgrounds does not automatically mean a diversity of thought. Rather, diversity should mean, especially for an editorial page, a diversity of thought on matters that affect all members of this institution. SUSAN D. GLAZER '98 April...
Some of our frustration with the World Wide Wait is, in fairness, due to page designers who make their sites too complex and image-filled to download quickly. But much of the blame goes in this case not to the message, but to the messengers...
...astonishment, these claims actually understated Opera's speed. On my Pentium 200 with 64 megabytes of RAM, the ABC News web site took 13 seconds to load in Navigator 4.0. Opera handled the page equally well in an astonishing four seconds. PC World magazine loaded in Opera in seven seconds (versus Netscape Navigator's 22), and Time-Warner's Pathfinder site took a blazingly-quick three seconds in Opera instead of Netscape's 12. What's more, all of these pages were rendered properly by Opera, whose authors boast full HTML 3.2 compliance...