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...letters, “I believe in escapism.” The cover was hot pink; Annie Shawn was on it and kickers included “Tis the Season for Steamy Sex” and “10 Hot Harvard Men.” Freeze was a girls?? magazine in the tradition of YM and Seventeen, a frivolous book of fluff that was not so much amateurish as exuberant and joyously faithful to its genre. “Sometimes, we all need to relax,” Sebastian wrote in her inaugural editor?...

Author: By Leon Neyfakh, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: What's My Age Again? | 5/17/2007 | See Source »

...home of 21,903 registered inhabitants, according to the U.N. It houses nearly 700 families designated as hardship cases, and was especially active during the First Intifada, the Palestinian uprising that occurred from 1987 to 1993. In front of a room overflowing with spectators, two girls??Sabreen and Tahreer, 15—and a boy, Taha, 16, each recounted a different aspect of their experience in the camp through an interpreter. During her presentation, Sabreen described how her grandmother was forced to leave her homeland and how the older generations “left everything because they felt...

Author: By Sanders I. Bernstein, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Palestinians Exhibit Photos of Camps | 4/12/2007 | See Source »

...Last Stand”) and his notorious life of crime. Initially, Rugged’s attempts at law-breaking are so pathetic that the only person who thinks he’s cool is his half-wit sidekick, Lagrand (Paul Schneider, “All the Real Girls??). Through twists of fate and macabre miscommunication, however, Rugged bumbles into a status upgrade from town peon to local legend and “cop killer” by the end of the film. “Live Free or Die” follows Rugged through exploits and errors alike...

Author: By Mollie K. Wright, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Live Free or Die | 4/6/2007 | See Source »

High school, according to “Mean Girls??’s resident “outsider” Janis Ian, is complicated. It takes an expert to navigate the dangerous terrain of the high school cafeteria, where everyone from the “Nerdy Asians” to the “Unfriendly Black Hotties” is neatly divided into categories. Unspoken divisions reign supreme. While this may be an accurate portrayal of the high school social scene, Harvard students like to think they have progressed past this type of self-segregation. But in reality...

Author: By Sachi A. Ezura, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Great Divide? | 3/21/2007 | See Source »

...dilapidated neighborhoods of Kars interviewing the families of girls who had committed suicide, he hears of lives of quiet desperation: 16-year-olds engaged to elderly men, girls subjected to verbal and physical abuse by fathers and husbands, and so on.Yet the histories of “head-scarf girls?? of the Institute are different: these are comparatively privileged girls whose parents support their pursuit of college education. These girls have given the head scarf a particular semiotic significance: it is for them a “symbol of ‘political Islam...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: TOME RAIDER: Snow | 3/1/2007 | See Source »

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