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Word: incorrection (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Officilas from the University Health Services, in a letter dated May 4, attacked Pattullo's statement as "unenlightened, psychologically incorrect and clearly homophobic...

Author: By Jessica Marshall, | Title: Havard Official Apologizes For Letter, Reiterates Position on Homosexuality | 5/7/1982 | See Source »

...article in the April 21, 1982, Harvard Crimson entitled "Women Ask to Change Rape Policy" quoted Harvard student Sharon Orr '83 as stating that Wellesley College had 25 reported rape cases last year. The figures given by Ms. Orr is grossly incorrect. There was one reported incident of rape last year (1980-81), none in the academic year 1979-80 and none this year. Barry F. Monshan Chief of Police, Wellesley College

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Rape Statistics | 5/7/1982 | See Source »

Officials said that several landlords complained that the dollar amount of the increase for their building was incorrect and that the landlords' claims are being investigated before the tenants' notices are mailed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: City Rent Board To Mail Notices Of Rent Increase | 4/8/1982 | See Source »

...incorrect, in my view, to have the Faculty approve a student government. Why should, in a parallel example. Massachusetts have any say in the constitution of California? Granted, if they choose to do so, the Faculty could have offered the student-composed constitution convention the benefits of their wisdom, but only in the form of advice--not veto. Unfortunately, as the saying goes, beggars cannot be choosers Students could, without Faculty approval, set up a centralized student government and elect representatives to it (Sounds like a Student Assembly to me) But since the Faculty control the money and authority-granting...

Author: By Leonard T. Mendonca, | Title: Meetings, Headaches, and Mixed Emotions | 3/11/1982 | See Source »

Life is not, of course, always so easy at the College Board. The SAT got in trouble about three years ago, when Ralph Nader and some colleagues accused the Board and ETS of using biased test questions, loading them with arbitrary or down-right incorrect answers, and keeping too tight a stranglehold on college admissions and education in general with the statistics they spewed out. Under pressure from Nader and others, New York State passed a "truth-in-testing" law requiring that the tests be gradually "demystified...

Author: By Amy E. Schwartz, | Title: Verbal Aptitude | 3/9/1982 | See Source »

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