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Johannessen echoes the sentiment. “Leverett was very special,” she says. “We were a small unit, 26 employees. It was a close-knit group. We ate meals together...

Author: By Simon W. Vozick-levinson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Cooking with 'Gasolina' | 4/6/2006 | See Source »

...provided invaluable help” throughout the summer. Lidia Rekas, who has known Shakir since they were both in fifth grade, said that her last memory of Shakir was when Shakir helped her prepare for the Graduate Management Admission Test. “We stayed up all night and ate pizza and I slept on her couch that night,” Rekas said. “Shirin’s absence leaves me with a huge hole in my heart.” Rekas, a frequent triathlon competitor, said that she was participating in the Ironman, considered the most...

Author: By Paras D. Bhayani, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Law Student Dies In Peru Accident | 4/4/2006 | See Source »

...Port area of Monrovia. There, for the next day and a half, together and separately, we were politely interrogated by a team of ECOMOG military police about where we had come from and what we had seen. We slept for two nights on the floor of the M.P. headquarters, ate military rations and were given soap and buckets of water to wash with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liberia In the Land of Blood and Tears | 3/29/2006 | See Source »

...thinks there’s a lot of opportunities for change in Burma in the current generation.” Speaking fluent English, Bo Kyi said he learned the language one sentence at a time from a fellow prisoner who was formerly a professor. “I ate a lot of dictionaries in my prison times,” he joked. “Bo Kyi’s trip is very significant in that it can ignite a new wave of student activism on Burma at Harvard,” Billenness said, according to Simon Billenness, treasurer...

Author: By Yingquiqi C. Lei, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Burmese Activist Recounts Torture | 3/20/2006 | See Source »

Plaintiffs against food companies have had some initial setbacks--in courts of law and in the court of public opinion. People snickered when two New York teenagers--one whose regular diet consisted of two Big Mac or Chicken McNugget meals a day and another who usually ate a Happy Meal or a Big Mac three or four times a week--sued McDonald's, claiming it had made them morbidly fat. A federal judge tossed out their case in 2003. But last year an appeals court revived it and allowed discovery, an unsettling development for food companies because it could open...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Politics of Fat | 3/19/2006 | See Source »

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