Word: princeton
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...admissions season— which has seen the largest college applicant pool ever—comes to a close, one immutable fact was confirmed by a recent Princeton Review survey: students still want to go to Harvard. A lot. For the first time ever, Harvard captured the top spot in The Princeton Review’s “College Hopes & Worries Survey” as the “dream college” undergraduate applicants would most like to attend if cost and acceptance were of no concern. For the past four years, that distinction had been held...
...some wonder whether the College will ever return to accepting transfer applications. In recent years, Princeton University suspended applications from transfer students for a two-year period, only to extend the suspension into the present...
...next two academic years, citing the extensive evaluation of the rampant housing crunch as the cause. Although the space crunch is a real and important issue, this decision is unwise, untimely, and inappropriately executed. We do not question the idea that transferring is a privilege, not a right. Princeton does not have a transfer program, and Yale admits no more than 24 applicants annually. At Harvard, the number of admitted transfers has been notoriously temperamental: after a five-year downward trend, no transfers were admitted in the spring of 2003. Since then, the number has been rising steadily, averaging between...
...victory over the No. 16 Crimson (17-14-4) on March 22 at the Times Union Center in Albany, N.Y., the No. 15 Tigers (22-13-0) ended Harvard’s season and extended their own, clinching the ECAC tournament title and the accompanying NCAA bid. While Princeton lost 5-1 to No. 1 seed North Dakota in the Midwest region in the first round, the Crimson spent a second consecutive spring break without any NCAA hockey to look forward to. “We didn’t finish it off exactly the way we wanted...
...were a little different. The weekend got off to a bad start when Saturday’s double header against Cornell was postponed because of bad weather, and it only got worse when the Crimson (7-14, 0-2 Ivy) dropped its first two games of the year to Princeton (7-17, 4-0) yesterday—both by one run. “We have 18 more Ivy league games,” captain Shelly Madick said. “We didn’t go undefeated last year and we know we are not going to go undefeated...