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Word: editor (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2000
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Usage:

...Hasty Pudding and the Freshman Smoker Committee, he managed to pull gentleman's Cs. Ronald Ferry, then head of Winthrop House, characterized JFK as "reasonably inconspicuous," and an old friend recalls his amorous reputation: "Jack never even went steady until late in his senior year." Author and Crimson editor Cleveland Amory '39, described him as "a pleasant, interesting guy. But the legend that we considered him destined for the presidency is pure hogwash." As JFK discovered during the Cold War, and as his former classmates witnessed during his reign in the White House, never underestimate the potential...

Author: By K. E. Kitchen, | Title: Fifteen Minutes: Behind a University's Very Close Doors... 'The JFK Suite' | 3/16/2000 | See Source »

...former editor of FM, I would like to make a general stylistic suggestion for the mag: more first-person pieces. Speaking from a reader's perspective, I'd like to point out that I'm not really interested in the stories; I'm interested in the writers and every embarrassing detail of their Harvard existence. See this letter I? Learn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fifteen Minutes: From Our BULGING Mail Bags… | 3/16/2000 | See Source »

...party's elusive host, Sriram P. Das '00, also a Crimson editor, is indeed a Harvard student with a flair for the finer things in life. His invite-only parties trace to November 1998, when Das and three friends hosted a hip-hop show after party at The Middle East. Thus began Das' self-proclaimed duty to provide an outlet for under-partied undergraduates. "Nobody else here has parties, so I might as well do it myself," quips Das, whose parents conveniently graced him with a Charles Square apartment before his junior year. With five official parties tallied since September...

Author: By S. Tuysuzoglu, | Title: Fifteen Minutes: Whine and Cheese | 3/16/2000 | See Source »

...EDITOR'S NOTE: To take the anthrax shot or not? That is the question facing hundreds of thousands of military personnel, who are under orders to roll up their sleeves for the controversial jab or face dismissal. Among those making the decision is TIME.com writer Frank Pellegrini, who is on leave as he undergoes training for the Army Reserves. Having completed boot camp in Fort Jackson, S.C. - regular readers may recall his series describing his experiences there - he is now in the Army's journalism school. In this supplement to his series, he describes how he is dealing with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: He's Ready to Take a Bullet, but How About an Anthrax Shot? | 3/15/2000 | See Source »

Admirable as his cause may be, says TIME Digital editor Joshua Quittner, Saylor will face challenges on his way, the least of which will be financial. (It's also not entirely new; Britain since the '60s has had its highly regarded Open University, an increasingly Internet-oriented, low-cost institution where lectures are given over TV channels and assignments are handed in via e-mail.) "I have a feeling that $100 million will be a mere drop in the bucket," says Quittner. But assuming the school comes to fruition, it could easily attract investors with the lure of say, advertising...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Good-bye, Quads — It's Point, Click and Graduate | 3/15/2000 | See Source »

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