I'll have to read it again later because right now I'm getting distracted by people moving to adjacent rooms in my dorm. That said, I did like every piece that I could concentrate for more than a minute at a time and re-reading is something I'm actually looking forward to. However, I would like to give some praise to web designer and everyone responsible for choosing colour scheme. I'm colour-blind (bottom left on this picture is a good approximation) and had no problems reading or navigating. Whatever few URLs there are get highlighted after hovering over them, contrast is kept to reasonable (as opposed to "we have to make it zazzy and modern with pale green font on a deep purple/orange/puce background" that makes me want to strangle someone) and it's actually easy on the eyes. It's almost like you actually want people to read your magazine ;). MASSIVE props to your graphic/web designer, especially if they are not colour-blind themselves.
It wasn't directly on purpose (I didn't run the website through a color-blindness checker), but I think that a lot of web designers in my generation are picking up the importance of contrast in their work. Thanks for the feedback, this has been great to hear!
Crap, I forgot to update the post. Oh well, I'll say it here: I could live without poems, but I definitely don't hate them[1]. ;) Other then that, no complaints. Just took the test, seems like I've joined the DFW club with 86% ;). That poem wasn't that depressing, damn it. :P Regarding the colour scheme, I meant it. It's good to know that finally some people are trying to make shit readable. On some websites I need to resort to a browser that is only slightly younger than me and sheer fact that you even know about colour-blind checker is just heartwarming. [1] - Seriously, don't take it neither personally nor like I didn't like it on principle. Quick answer, I'm not a fan of poetry in general. Longer answer: nearly 100% of my exposure to it is Polish from school. Aside of being largely tedious to read, almost every single one was assigned to be memorised. It's hard to enjoy poetry when your immediate though is "Oh fuck! Another shit I'll have to remember and recite in front of the class" :/.
I admit, I'm not the biggest fan of poetry either. It requires a different frame of mind then prose, often forces you to read it multiple times, and sometimes I just don't get it at all. It might break the flow of the reading experience if there's too much. I probably hit the limit this issue, the next issue I'll definitely favor more prose.