GertrudeRises
GertrudeRises
GertrudeRises

@Blueberry26: Not saying that you shouldn't be mad. Just saying that logically speaking, it shouldn't be surprising, and that maybe we should consider the larger issue. This publication obviously won't change unless the population of the student body changes.

@nozer: actually no. I'm looking at it now, and there are only two black guys compared to three black girls. I'm a Yale student and i'm taking a look at the publication right now.

So I go to Yale and just read this issue at lunch. I'm not saying to claims of this Rumpus issue being overly white are wrong, they aren't but ummm hello . . .it's GOOD OL BOY'S Yale.

I keep blinking my eyes trying to find out if this is real.

@hovy: When will the world end ???

What's with the last comment about the judge's weave?

I think the ambiguity of the meaning of bitch comes into play. Men use it when you are too uptight, angry, high powered, crying, won't go out with them etc. The fact they lump women in all of these states together, and think that the same word describes all women in these different states is pretty offensive to me.

@MIXED: What do you mean by modest style? Just wondering.

@Tippi Hedren: random . . . but thank you for putting "guidos" in quotes. I just recently moved to a university on the East coast where the label is thrown around pretty freely and thought that most names that insinuate generalizations about a group of people connected (even if distantly) by some shared heritage, was

For me, the most disturbing part is that even now, when there are SO many gorgeous black models out there. They still chose to apply black make up white models. I guess they are being edgy here, but not in a fashion sense in any way. Vogue is being edgy in that they are openly demonstrating the lengths they will go to

Vilar's addiction to abortion (which I won't put in quotes because after reading the article it seems to be just a legitimate as an addiction to cigarettes or alcohol) offers the chance to view other addictions associated with women in a more serious light. Aren't bulimia, anorexia, and other obsessions with being