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What Women Really Want

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Andy Borowitz is author of "The Borowitz Report: The Big Book of Shockers" (Simon & Schuster, 2004).

In an effort to “level the academic playing field,” Harvard University President Lawrence Summers announced today that the university would introduce a home economics major designed specifically for its female students.

“Starting in the fall, Harvard will offer home economics for women who find economics too tricky,” said Mr. Summers, who called the move “long overdue.”

Mr. Summers said the new courses would help women at Harvard improve their grade-point averages, adding, “When it comes to getting busy in the kitchen, women are second to none.”

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The home ec major, which will consist of courses in cooking, sewing and what Summers called “the allied domestic arts and sciences,” is considered a major departure for the curriculum of the storied academic institution.

Coming in the wake of Mr. Summers’ recent controversial remarks about purported intellectual differences between the sexes, the Harvard president’s decision to introduce a home economics major for women was widely seen as an olive branch of sorts.

But the move may have backfired, as an angry mob of women faculty members protested outside his office today, demanding his immediate ouster and burning Mr. Summers in effigy.

In a meeting with the protesters, Mr. Summers promised that he would recruit additional women to the Harvard faculty but refused to tell the protesters how many: “I don’t want to fill your heads with a lot of big numbers you won’t understand.”

Elsewhere, President Bush’s nominee to be attorney general, Alberto Gonzales, continued to disavow torture today, but told reporters, “This is harder than quitting smoking.”

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