Word: respondents
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Crimson executives respond that they do have executive editors who are assigned to specific beats like Science and Technology, City, College, Student Life or Faculty. However, only features are regularly edited by these beat editors. For daily stories, Chang says, "we have to work under extremely tight deadlines, and we just don't have the luxury of a publication with a longer production cycle." For example, if a speech event takes place at eight o'clock and the paper has to go to press in a matter of hours, then there is often no time to check all the facts...
...alumna of Harvard, I feel inclined to respond to the article "Tutors Criticize Randomization in an Open Letter" (May 5) and say that I completely support the statements in the letter. In recent visits to Cambridge, I have noticed the lack of comfort and House spirit embodied in the present House system. Fortunately, I was in one of the last groups of students able to choose my home for three years. I chose Cabot, North, Currier and Adams as my four choices for the housing lottery. The vibe in these four Houses fit my personality. The lottery placed my blocking...
Indeed, the Justice Department said it would respond promptly, but pointed out that Microsoft's "emergency" (Justice's ironic quotes) has been staring it in the face since last December, and that the company has only itself to blame for failing to seek clarification on the issues that may now delay the release of Windows 98. It's hardly surprising to add that the Tuesday night talks between Bill Gates and DOJ point man Joel Klein were fruitless, with Gates maintaining that Windows is not an operating system monopoly...
...came up with the idea of sculpture as something for the lightest air currents to change: arrays of delicately balanced wire arms with colored leaves and fins and fans on the end, orbiting eccentrically and never coming back to exactly the same position. They respond to your presence. They are supremely friendly sculpture, even in the distance of abstraction. Their severity of line and form is always tempered by a certain rhythmic sweetness, as in one of the masterpieces of Calder's middle years, The Spider, 1940. Later, as he got famous and "monumental" commissions were pressed...
...throats are slit with sharp palm leaves, when children's heads are smashed against tree trunks, when men are slaughtered with the crack of a hoe. These things happened every day in Cambodia for 3 1/2 terrible years, and when the world learned of it, people could only respond with dumb horror...