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...compact "Dumped" begins with a drunken shag at a party in London. He, Binny, collects abused books for tantalizing revelations about the previous owner. "This is the section with pages torn out," he says of his collection. "These are crammed full of exam notes." She, Debby, runs a used clothing store. Smitten and desperate Binny finds Debby again and they begin a tenuous relationship. Watson has given us two very convincing male wankers in "Breakfast After Noon" and "Slow News Day," but this time it's the snobbish and secretive Debby who provides the friction. "Binny's not boyfriend material...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comix About Real World Problems | 5/7/2002 | See Source »

...meeting packed with business, the council also passed a bill allocating $2,500 in Harvard University Dining Services vouchers for a “Primal Feast” to accompany the traditional pre-exam “Primal Scream...

Author: By Claire A. Pasternack, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Council Report Stresses Advising, Need For Diversity | 5/6/2002 | See Source »

...class has long been known as a gut. Greg D. Henning ’02, who took the class in 1999, says the final was so easy that most students finished prematurely, with more than an hour left in the exam session. “One of the things that I still can’t get over is that it had a multiple-choice midterm and final,” he says...

Author: By Yan Fang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Rough Sex? | 5/2/2002 | See Source »

Transfer students have never had to explain a missing identification card to Domna in Annenberg Hall and, to them, the term “proctor” means nothing more than an exam supervisor...

Author: By Maria S. Pedroza, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: At Last, Harvard Is Home | 5/1/2002 | See Source »

...stakes are high—according to the most recent statistics for the high school class of 2003, after the initial test in Spring 2001 and a retest for students who failed in the fall, 43 percent of Cambridge’s students have still not passed the exam. Over the next year and the next few retests, some of those students will increase their scores and pass. But the stark reality remains—if Cambridge had not taken the courageous action it did, a significant percentage of the city’s students would not have received...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Standing Firm on MCAS | 4/29/2002 | See Source »

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