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With respect to honors, the report presented two suggestions. The first would eliminate “honors-only?? concentrations and honors tracks within concentrations, and instead force all students in a concentration to follow the same requirements. Each concentration would say whether all concentrators would be required to do a thesis and would then “apply common grade point average cuts and requirements about breadth to the pool of honors candidates recommended by concentration.” This would essentially end the current system where the concentration recommends candidates for honors and the University nearly always...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, THE CRIMSON STAFF | Title: Grade Inflation Plan a B-minus | 4/23/2002 | See Source »

...that West’s comparison of Summers to Sharon can be interpreted as inflammatory, note that West did attempt to frame his opinion outside of the conflict that currently exists in the Middle East. His statement says that, in one way—and in one particular way only??Summers and Sharon are similar: they both have a tendency to act like a “bull in a china shop.” The comparison of Summers to Sharon is a metaphor; it is not some larger commentary on West’s political views...

Author: By Brandon A. Gayle, | Title: The Crimson Staff Does Not Speak for Us | 4/22/2002 | See Source »

...League has not reformed athletic recruiting since 1991, when it eliminated “freshman-only?? teams, and it is unclear what the athletic directors’ recommendation will...

Author: By Rahul Rohatgi, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Possible Recruiting Cuts Worry Harvard | 4/16/2002 | See Source »

Five days a week, Bailey H. Spaulding ’04 treks over to Divinity Avenue, goes to the 10th floor of William James Hall, walks through a door that reads “Authorized Personnel Only?? and says hello to the 12 vervet monkeys and 24 cotton-top tamarins that call Professor of Psychology Marc D. Hauser’s primate lab their home...

Author: By Elizabeth L. Olive, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Mr. Tamarin Man | 4/11/2002 | See Source »

...changes made by the filmmakers show how niche-oriented Grisham’s novel is and explain the book’s monumental success. The book is an unabashed male fantasy, where women’s most—usually, only??distinguishing characteristics are either their legs, their chest or their unattractiveness (it is observed that the receptionists at Bendini, Lambert & Locke “seem kind of plump”). Our hero, Mitch McDeere, cheats on his wife Abby (who, by the way, has “long, brown legs”), never tells her and never...

Author: By Ben C. Wasserstein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: AfFirmative Action | 2/28/2002 | See Source »

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