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Tomorrow, in newsstands nation-wide, Malikah J. Sherman '96 will be crowned by Sassy magazine as the "Sassiest Girl in America" and Amina Runyan-Shefa '97 as one of six "Sassy Girl" finalists...

Author: By Daniel I. Silverberg, | Title: Harvard Student Is Sassiest | 12/7/1993 | See Source »

...Sophistry, an almost random set of fashionably themed vignettes by Jonathan Marc Sherman, the teacher and student re-enact their encounter in parallel recollections. Rapp rampages through both, first as a bratty seducer who hides doubts about his sexuality by swiveling his hips, shaking a finger cockily in the professor's face, tearing off his own clothes and collapsing in puppyish self-pity, then as a mute but furious victim. His vengeance gives Pendleton a career moment too. Reduced to a job as Santa, he stands disheveled, muttering the words of one Christmas carol while hearing the tune of another...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Glimpses into Lost Souls | 10/25/1993 | See Source »

MOST OF US will never see our names on the cover of Sassy magazine unless, of course, it's on the address label. Not so for the Sassiest Girl in America, Malikah Sherman...

Author: By Mike E. Farbiarz, | Title: She's Sassy, Not Seventeen | 10/14/1993 | See Source »

...here's where Malikah Jamillah Sherman of scenic Staten Island put distance between herself and the pack. Malikah built a three-dimensional city--sort of like a diorama but not really--out of colorful construction paper. On the roof of each building, she wrote a word or two describing a social problem that would not exist in her perfect world. Additional sheets of construction paper were put to good use in the compilation of a booklet about her best-of-all-possible-worlds metropolis. One judge was delighted to discover the paper town's dual use as a crown: during...

Author: By Mike E. Farbiarz, | Title: She's Sassy, Not Seventeen | 10/14/1993 | See Source »

Recently, a Federal Appeals Court returned to the lower courts a prior decision that found MIT guilty of breaking the Sherman Antitrust Act. According to the original verdict, the school had joined Ivy League colleges in "price-fixing" financial aid. The universities had been convening annually to ensure that mutual applicants would receive identical aid packages. All of the Ivies quietly acquiesced to out-of-court settlements that required them to cease the "data sharing." But MIT stood behind its beliefs, and went to court...

Author: By Hugh G. Eakin, | Title: The Free Agency Applicant | 10/5/1993 | See Source »

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