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...functioning mail system or credit-card services, so billing methods prevalent in the West couldn't be used. Instead, customers get airtime by purchasing prepaid calling cards from roughly 4,000 vendors who are Roshan franchisees. In Kabul, the vendors, most of them selling cards on the street, earn about $100 a month, much more than most laborers. "We are creating an entrepreneurial middle class," says Khoja. Roshan is also helping to entertain the masses by sponsoring one of Afghanistan's most popular TV shows, a knockoff of American Idol called Afghan Star, which follows aspiring celebrities as they perform...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Capitalism Comes to Afghanistan | 12/4/2006 | See Source »

...travels from boy to man? The book's ultimate satirical trick was to flip the slur into a sales tool. Its title: Nigger! "Whenever you hear the word 'nigger,'" Gregory wrote in the introduction, "you'll know they're advertising my book." Call a man a nigger, earn a brother a dollar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Viewpoint: Why I'm Good with the N Word | 12/3/2006 | See Source »

...after Cahow’s goal. By the time the first period ended, the Bulldogs had outshot the Crimson, 9-8. Between periods, Harvard coach Katey Stone pressed the team for greater effort. “I told them if something good was going to happen, they needed to earn it,” she said after the game. “In the last eight minutes of the first period, we hadn’t [earned it].” Harvard upped its level of play in the second period, with Chu and sophomore forward Sarah Vaillancourt taking numerous...

Author: By Tyler D. Sipprelle, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Double Vision: Kessler’s steady hand, offensive pressure help Crimson top Duluth | 12/3/2006 | See Source »

...recent poll by The Chronicle of Higher Education showed that 94 percent of pollees believed that “every high-school student who wants a four-year college degree should have the opportunity to earn one.” Another 52 percent agreed that a college degree was “essential for success in our society...

Author: By Gracye Y. Cheng, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Playing Catch Up | 11/29/2006 | See Source »

...reducing the amount given to each team—we are convinced that the money spent this time of year is well worth it. All it takes to run for UC President and Vice-President is 150 student signatures. Seven pairs of students successfully accomplished that task to earn the right to have their names on the ballot this year (one ticket, Omar A. Musa ’08 and Daniel Ross-Rieder ’08, have since dropped out of the race). Given that students are free to sign multiple petitions, this is not a particularly high...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: More Voices for a Better UC | 11/29/2006 | See Source »

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