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Word: pseudonymes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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High Tea in Mosul follows two Englishwomen, longtime friends Pauline (a pseudonym) and Margaret (her real name), who married Iraqi students they met in England and moved in the 1970s to the ancient northern Iraqi city of Mosul. In 2003 they met the author - an Australian then covering the war for the Irish Times - shortly after coalition troops freed the city. O'Donnell's book is a brief, devastating account of how these women's lives change over three increasingly grim decades in their adopted country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Western Wives, Iraqi Lives | 4/19/2007 | See Source »

...following accounts are from Harvard students who have agreed to anonymously recall some of their experience with sexual health at UHS. Each student has carefully chosen his or her own pseudonym...

Author: By Kathleen E. Hale | Title: Nurse Ratched Lives at UHS | 4/11/2007 | See Source »

French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin wasn't too happy when his 20-year-old daughter Marie packed in her college studies to become a model. Luckily for Mlle Steiss (the pseudonym Villepin uses to conceal her political pedigree), the gamble soon paid off. She is the new face of Givenchy perfume and her billboard campaign hits the U.S. in April. And she's not the only prime ministerial offspring to choose a more glamorous route to success than politics...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Premier Attractions | 3/7/2007 | See Source »

...time, and the young men moved in expatriate circles that included well-known cultural figures. Writers and modern-art patrons Leo Stein and his sister Gertrude, Impressionist painter Mary Cassatt, portraitist John Singer Sargent, painter John La Farge, novelist Edith Wharton and British Gothic writer Vernon Lee (the pseudonym of Violet Paget, whom novelist Henry James, himself a frequent visitor to Italy, called "the most intelligent person in Florence") all clustered in the Tuscan town...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Making Waves in Tuscany | 3/7/2007 | See Source »

Those letters that we do publish respond in an original way to articles (in any section) previously published in The Crimson. They are usually 150-300 words and are signed by the author or authors (up to three), and not an organization nor under a pseudonym. Letters that are brief, timely, and perhaps witty or humorous, are more likely to be published. Good letters engage the subject without preamble, make their point quickly, and generally limit their scope to a single argument. If you’re interested in writing a more extended argument, consider submitting...

Author: By The crimson editoral board | Title: The Crimson Editorial Board: How We Work | 1/31/2007 | See Source »

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