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...what about Christmas ornaments? Family heirlooms? Those skinny jeans you hope to--but will probably never--wear again? "It's a very emotional process," says professional organizer Julie Morgenstern. Her new book, When Organizing Isn't Enough: SHED Your Stuff, Change Your Life, lays out a plan for clearing out both physical and sentimental clutter. "Often these are things that represent who you once were," she says. "But once their purpose is over, they just keep you stagnant." SHED, by the way, is an acronym for "separate the treasures, heave the trash, embrace your identity from within and drive yourself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How to Live With Just 100 Things | 6/5/2008 | See Source »

...platform is perhaps the most complete of all of the candidates and could also be a strong first step in the right direction. But while one should never underestimate the rhetorical power of the presidency, one must remember that the vested interests in Washington for the status quo can wear down even the most energetic leader...

Author: By James Baxter | Title: A Changing Climate on College Campuses | 6/4/2008 | See Source »

...With most Houses accommodating between 400 and 500 undergraduates each year, University Hall administrators are again forced to address the traditional problems of wear and tear, as well as new issues brought on by a changing and growing undergraduate population...

Author: By Abby D. Phillip and Charles J. Wells, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: College Prepares for $1 Billion Housing Renovation | 6/4/2008 | See Source »

...Yale. By the time Harvard admissions officers got to his application in the January 1 pile, the Bethesda, Md. native had already been accepted to the other Ivy, had enrolled in Yale’s “adopt-a-prefrosh” program, and had the chance to wear a Yale 2012 t-shirt...

Author: By Arianna Markel, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard's New Delayed Opening | 6/4/2008 | See Source »

Sixty-three years ago, in 1945, my grandmother qualified as a young physician in Iraq. Her parents had accepted her decision not to wear the concealing black “abaya,” and she walked freely in the streets with her friends. Thirty years later, with oil prices spiraling in the wake of regional conflicts, she was one of a generation of female professors, department heads, and even ministers in Baghdad. To this day, her daughter, my aunt, fights for women’s rights, unbowed and unscarved, in the Iraqi capital...

Author: By Hassan Al-damluji | Title: Only Education Can Tell the Story | 6/3/2008 | See Source »

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