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Furthermore, I am the first Crimson Ombudsperson who is not also a Crimson executive. This year's editors decided that having a Crimson exec in charge of a column designed to offer an outsider's view of Crimson coverage was just a wee slight conflict of interest. And, indeed, I am not a Crimson executive, nor have I ever comped The Crimson. Until I took this position, I had never even been quoted in a Crimson news story...

Author: By Shawn Zeller, | Title: READER REPRESENTATIVE | 3/20/1996 | See Source »

Raphael Bougy, a friendly and talkative cab driver, says that "once in a while" late on Friday and Saturday nights, as students return to campus from clubs or parties, he faces the drunken student. Bougy recalls with disgust cleaning up the vomit in the wee hours of the morning...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cab Drivers Tell All: From Drunken Students to Rich, Famous Passengers | 3/15/1996 | See Source »

While many juniors worked into the wee hours yesterday to prepare for the arrival of their parents, for others the cleaning operation was just getting underway last night...

Author: By William E. Rehling, | Title: JUNIOR '96 | 3/2/1996 | See Source »

Everyone knows about miscreants like Hugh Grant and Pee Wee Herman. But who knew that JANE FONDA was arrested for drug smuggling and assaulting a policeman, AL PACINO for carrying a concealed weapon and SUZANNE SOMERS for (gasp!) writing bad checks? George Seminara did. He also knew that charges were dropped against Fonda, then 32; that Pacino, 20, was briefly incarcerated and let go; and that Somers, 24, paid the cash back and wasn't prosecuted. Seminara collects celebrity mug shots. His book on the subject, Mug Shots, will be out in June. "One day I sat down and thought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Feb. 26, 1996 | 2/26/1996 | See Source »

...RETROSPECT, IT SEEMS A STRANGE cultural aberration. Or maybe a temporary virus. For a couple of years there, David Letterman was the toast of television. After toiling in the wee hours for more than a decade, the host of NBC's Late Night had been passed over for the job as Johnny Carson's successor on the Tonight Show. But he parlayed that slight into a lucrative new contract at CBS and his own 11:30 p.m. show to compete with Jay Leno. The crowds that jammed his studio audience gave him standing ovations every night; his Top 10 lists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: STUPID NETWORK TRICKS | 2/26/1996 | See Source »

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