Word: contentively
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...most of the hour-long session, they discussed the mundane: Who’s advertising? Who’s postering? But when the talk turned to content, the mission of H Bomb, the student-run Harvard sex magazine, came under scrutiny...
...general interest meeting in November attended by more than a dozen people, the editors planned a New York “naked party” with a well-known nude photographer. But they also sought ways to make their magazine’s content more diverse. It is scheduled to reappear in doorboxes on Feb. 14 after a three-year hiatus...
...fostering “smart discussion of sex,” according to Baldegg. As the planned magazine drew media attention around the country, the College said it would reconsider H Bomb’s status as a recognized campus publication because of concerns that it would include pornographic content. In the end, the College allowed H Bomb to be published—in making the decision, administrators cited, among other things, the prospect of a “slippery slope”—and the Undergraduate Council allocated $2,000 to the magazine...
...thing all around. When Current TV, Al Gore ’69’s cable channel, did a story about H Bomb, the crew interviewed co-founder Baldegg, who happened to be looking for a job at the time. She now works for the network, soliciting content. “H Bomb looks great on your resume,” Baldegg said...
Sitting before students sprawled on couches and the floor of a Quincy dorm who snacked on Dunkin Donuts Munchkins and flipped through old copies of H Bomb, Wasserman introduced the magazine as a “great combination of dirty and smart.” She described the content “pretty all encompassing” with topics including science, medicine, and art. Slated for February were pieces about widow burning, sex in Classical societies, and a profile of a porn star...