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...least one of these nights. Recently, some Mt. Auburn final clubs have been heard playing loud music as early in the week as Wednesday. Our minds are in disturbia, indeed: This sort of behavior is an embarrassment. We must collectively cross our fingers that we will narrowly escape The Princeton Review’s list of top party schools next year, as we are teetering on the edge of being publicly exposed as a wild bunch. Officials at other Boston-area colleges have been quicker to address this issue than Harvard, but our administration should follow suit and initiate...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Just Sleep On It | 10/2/2008 | See Source »

...column, so let me switch gears and say something nice about the Lions: they’re not as bad as Dartmouth.Princeton, while no longer in its championship form of 2007, is a competent if mediocre squad that should have little trouble managing a victory in this one.Prediction: Princeton 21, Columbia 13YALE (1-1, 0-1 Ivy) VS. HOLY CROSS (1-2)If Ivy League football were a reality TV show, Yale would be calling up Harvard to establish an uneasy and secretive alliance aimed at getting Brown and Cornell kicked off the island. Unfortunately for the Bulldogs, this game...

Author: By Loren Amor, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: AROUND THE IVIES: Top Two Hope Ivy Order Returns | 10/2/2008 | See Source »

...preseason media poll, Harvard and Yale each collected 124 points and eight first-place votes. While Penn tallied the last first place vote, its 85 points was only good enough for fourth. Brown, who last won the Ivy title in 2005, finished third with 99 points. Princeton, Cornell, Dartmouth, and Columbia rounded out the list with distant 58, 54, 47, and 21 points, respectively...

Author: By Dixon McPhillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: DIX' SPORTING GOODS: Ivies Open After First Games | 9/28/2008 | See Source »

...particular interest is a 2005 psychology paper published in Science by Alexander Todorov of Princeton and his colleagues, which concludes that “rapid, unreflective trait inferences can contribute to voting choices,” rather than deliberative reasoning. In trials the researchers vindicated their hypothesis: Almost 72 percent of Senate race outcomes were successfully predicted simply by showing a sample of the electorate pictures of the candidates for whom they could vote for milliseconds at a time, and asking them to make snap judgments on those candidates’ competence...

Author: By James M. Larkin | Title: Skin Deep | 9/28/2008 | See Source »

...Yale. On Saturday, the cross-country squad traveled to New Haven, Conn., where the regionally ranked No. 8 men’s squad captured the Main Memorial Trophy for the second year in a row from the regionally ranked No. 6 Bulldogs. The women also raced—against Princeton, as well as Yale—taking second behind the Tigers. “I was pleased with the results,” Harvard coach Jason Saretsky said. “It’s a great historic rivalry, great tradition. And going up against a seasoned Yale squad...

Author: By Dixon McPhillips, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Strong Performances at HYP | 9/28/2008 | See Source »

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