Word: issueã
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...called a “slightly more academic collegiate oriented version of Cosmopolitan or Seventeen,” came out in December 2005 amidst questions over its financial sustainability. This year, the magazine printed only 200 copies—3300 fewer copies than last year’s pioneer issue??with grant money from the Ann Radcliffe Trust and the Undergraduate Council. “[We] printed out exactly as many copies as we had grant money,” Sebastian said. But despite the limited funds, Freeze’s sophomore issue has expanded in both length...
...small number of (often unpalatable) alternatives. “It was actually something Ryan and I had in our platform when we ran this year,” says UC Vice President Matthew L. Sundquist ’09. He described the proposal as a “quiet issue?? that would nonetheless significantly improve students’ everyday lives. Sundquist began by contacting several Asian-American groups to ask for their support, and Asian-American Association (AAA) Co-President Ren “Jimmy” Zhao ’08 confirmed that his organization will support...
...what the presenters said as inflammatory, but, in the end, the pictures speak for themselves: Each one depicts a real life experience of these teenagers. The event wasn’t about a scholarly or policy-based critique. It intended to offer a truthful, ground-level perspective of the issue??however desolate that may be—and the photographers’ images and words undoubtedly did just that...
...chance to vie for doorbox space with Harvard’s other publications. Suffering from insufficient funds, the organization was unable to doordrop its winter 2005 magazine, which was instead sold in the Harvard Coop at $2.95 a pop. And this was not only Freeze’s debut issue??it was the single issue the organization has been able to produce to date...
...Ticknor Lounge for the talk, titled “Our Generation’s Perceptions of Different Asian Ethnicities.” CSA President Lydia N. Lo ’09 said before the forum there would not be “a focus on the China-Japan issue?? at the event, even though it was prompted by the CSA e-mail discussion thread. She stressed instead an emphasis on the greater East Asian community. The bulk of the early discussion, however, still centered around recent comments by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who refuses to acknowledge that...