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...issues are as explosive as those that involve the Holocaust. This year has already seen the issue of Holocaust revisionism brust into major controversies on the campuses of Brandeis and Georgetown universities. In both cases, decisions by student newspapers to print revisionist advertisements sparked outrage and protests...
Harvard Dining Services' recent attempt to print nutritional information about all items it serves has drawn mixed reviews. Some find the tabulation of fat, carbohydrates, protein and calories a useful yardstick, while others decry these "bites" as nasty barbs that are incompatible with eating enjoyment. We at Dartboard feel that the new program would meet with universal acclamation if it were to imitate another popular campus rating system: namely, the CUE guide...
...nomination to a fellowship. The fellowships tutor suggested that the House office, with its capability of calling up unofficial transcripts, would surely be able to oblige The office, on the other hand, confirming that it indeed had the ability to do so, demurred that it was not allowed to print out an unofficial transcript. "But," replied the staffer with the cultivated courtesy of a Harvard bureaucrat, "you will get an unofficial copy in your registration packet." When said transcipt was not in said packet, an inquiry at the Registrar's table was met with a puzzled look: "You were misinformed...
Gady Epstein says that The Crimson must "[ask] questions every-body feels needn't be asked, and then [print] the answers everybody feels shouldn't be printed." ("What Is to Be Done...
...personal note, I have come to realize that, whether on television or in print, many people regard their news as news, indiscernible in their forms or presentation styles. Good columns and features may stand out as testament to a writer's craft, but often the writer stands silently behind his or her game or featured athlete like the umpire hoping to be complemented with silence, his task performed with neither flair nor error...