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...Necessary Liquid Courage" (Opinion, Feb. 3), Melissa Rose Langsam makes some comments on drinking that are quite erroneous. Her premise for the reason why Harvard students, specifically first-years, drink is that they are so unhappy here that they have no other outlet for their built-up frustrations. While this may be true for her, it seems unlikely that this assumption is universal within the College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Drinking Just a Choice | 2/6/1998 | See Source »

Three months of stocking shelves with brassierres in a peach-scented retail store was enough for Danice L. Woodley '00, who stayed home last summer in Schenectady, New York working for a Victoria's Secret outlet in a local shopping center...

Author: By Jason T. Benowitz, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Spending An Exotic Summer with the State Department | 2/6/1998 | See Source »

...ardent advocate for the rights of children, from genetic formation onwards, I long for the day when abortion is no longer the quick fix for some and seemingly the only outlet for others; I look forward to its being made illegal as well. At the same time, I have no wish to see poor women die or suffer future infertility from botched illegal abortions. Nor do I wish to see women of means help create a cottage industry of border abortion clinics in Canada and Mexico...

Author: By Christa M. Franklin, | Title: Tipping the Scales | 1/29/1998 | See Source »

...magazine, referred to informally as "the Weekly What" or "the What," provided an outlet for the creative and culture energy in the air. By the end of 1976, the magazine had even interviewed rock musician Frank Zappa...

Author: By Jonathan S. Paul, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Magazine Adds Art, Pop Culture | 1/24/1998 | See Source »

Changes are on view at your now friendly post office, or should we say postal retail outlet. Some 700 of the system's 33,000 post offices have morphed from bank-vault blandness into boutiques that sell such items as hats, neckties and Bugs Bunny trinkets while still providing a full line of postal services. The truly postally obsessed can choose a Pony Express sweatshirt or infant gear emblazoned with the words JUST DELIVERED. And customers are buying. "When a store replaces a post office, there is more than a 10% increase in revenues," says Nancy Wood, a postal-marketing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Zapping The Post Office | 1/19/1998 | See Source »

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