Word: sanger
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...laugh line—it was very funny,” says Times reporter David E. Sanger ’82, who was present at the lunch and is also a Crimson editor. “People laughed, and it was only when it appeared the next day that it sent the Republicans off the deep end. In the context…it was just Larry being Larry...
...would think out loud a lot more than people in the Bush administration do,” says Sanger. “I found it very refreshing. You get used to his style, which isn’t always mild. But I would always prefer a forceful advocacy of a view as long as it was backed up by facts than the approach that you hear a lot in Washington today...
...Sanger and Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof ’81, who is also a Crimson editor, spoke at a panel with Summers at their 20th anniversary Harvard reunion—a discussion Sanger says yielded some pointed media criticism from the press-weathered University President...
...think what made Larry a very effective public official, particularly in talking to reporters, was that he would let you in on his thinking,” says David E. Sanger ’82, a reporter with the New York Times who is also a Crimson editor. “He would argue with views that he saw in the paper. If I wrote something that he thought was misguided, he would call up and tell...
...What Sanger claims is not that the site should fall out of favor. Rather, he feels that it (and, he would argue, any other would-be reliable source online) needs to jettison some of its “anti-elitism” in favor of a legitimate peer review system, one which displays a genuine respect for authority. If, for example, there’s a dispute over the evolutionary development of women, shouldn’t we hasten to give more credit to a noted biologist than to an economist? And at any rate, shouldn’t either...