Word: reader
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...hard to be an effective Reader Representative for The Crimson when I am barely a Crimson reader. I decided to take this job because during my first two years at Harvard I read The Crimson almost every day and developed strong feelings about many aspects of the paper. I was excited by the idea of finding out about what other people thought about the paper and trying to work with Crimson executives to affect change...
David B. Orr '01, who is not a Crimson editor, is a social studies concentrator in Cabot House. He is the reader representative for The Crimson...
...security guards, were told to face "harsh economic realities" and were de facto forced out. While the University endowment has ballooned to over $14 billion, while the Capital Campaign has exceeded its $2.1 billion goal by $225 million and while University President Neil L. Rudenstine has informed every Crimson reader that Harvard has achieved "a goal greater than any other institution of higher learning in the history of the human race," the University continues to pay an estimated 2,000 workers poverty wages...
...Last week, it found its in. Last week, Anna and I joined another generation. And this week, FM brings our foray unto you, oh gentle reader, in a scrutiny concerning the kids at Cambridge Rindge and Latin---which, for those who don't know, is the high school right around the corner from Harvard Yard...
...which I've put aside. That book eliminates the narrative voice, the editorial voice, to an almost total extent. I wanted to see if I could write a biography of a President who lived between 1901 and 1909 in which there was absolutely no intrusion of the present. The reader gets the feeling from the first page to the last that they're back in the first decade of the century. So it couldn't be more different than the approach I took writing about Ronald Reagan. And the method I took with Ronald Reagan grew directly...