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Each year, Harvard and Dartmouth go toe-to-toe in a four-game, home-and-home series. The winner is all but assured of competing for the Ivy championship the following weekend; for ten years straight, Dartmouth or Harvard has won the Rolfe title...

Author: By Alex Mcphillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: There’s More to Harvard Sports Than ‘The Game’ | 8/28/2006 | See Source »

Beware of the Big Green: each year the Ivies’ most obnoxious fans attempt to turn Harvard’s O’Donnell Field into a Dartmouth home game...

Author: By Alex Mcphillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: There’s More to Harvard Sports Than ‘The Game’ | 8/28/2006 | See Source »

...math is simple: when so many more kids are applying, a smaller percentage get in, which yields the annual headlines about COLLEGE ADMISSIONS INSANITY. Princeton turned down 4 of every 5 of the valedictorians who applied last year, and Dartmouth could have filled its freshman class with students with a perfect score in at least one SAT subject and had some to spare. But in the meantime, partly as a result, partly in response to all kinds of social and economic trends, the rest of the college universe has shifted as well. The parents may be the last ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Needs Harvard? | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

...graduates have a "very impressive" rate of acceptance to medical schools. Carla Valenzuela, 18, who graduated in the spring from Martin Luther King Academic Magnet school in Nashville, Tenn., applied to 13 schools--and wound up picking her last choice. She turned down Amherst, Wellesley and Dartmouth in favor of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Part of the draw was being near a big city; part was the offer of a Meyerhoff scholarship, a prestigious, four-year grant for talented high school students studying science and related fields. All 52 Meyerhoff scholars from the class of 2005 went...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Needs Harvard? | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

...wanted to work right after college, I would have gone to a more 'name school' like Dartmouth," Valenzuela says. But she hopes to become a doctor, so she did some research. "I definitely looked at the medical-acceptance rates of each college and how strong their pre-med programs were, and that helped knock out a lot of colleges." Students with clear professional goals will pay more attention to the reputation of a single department than the whole university. Among the artistically inclined, the Rhode Island School of Design has always been pre-eminent, but schools like the Savannah College...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Who Needs Harvard? | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

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