Word: yaleness
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...Harvard students continue to find themselves faced with recurring pasta dishes and roast chicken for nights on end, students and representatives from other universities said that their dining services are handling the increase in world food prices differently. Karen J. Dougherty, director of communications for Yale University Dining Services, said Yale’s food vendors are indeed raising their prices for the university. But high prices, she said, have not significantly changed dining at Yale. “We’re not eliminating from the menu,” Dougherty said. Yale junior Charlie C. Milner said...
...another professor’s work in his 1985 book, “God Save This Honorable Court.” That same year, law professor Charles J. Ogletree Jr. admitted to lifting six paragraphs in his book, “All Deliberate Speed,” from a Yale professor. And in Oct. 2006, The Crimson uncovered another incident of plagiarism in Ogletree’s book, citing a paragraph that contained wording from a 1996 work by a University of California-San Diego civil rights scholar...
...university clamps down on alcohol in the dorms, much of the drinking could be driven into the eating clubs, which are autonomous of the university. Princeton’s recent examination of its alcohol policies fits into a larger trend at other Ivy League schools, including Dartmouth and Yale...
...Dartmouth’s Lilly Bertz having graduated last season, it only paves the way for continued success for the the Crimson vaulters. And junior Brittan Smith has vastly improved from last year’s campaign. At the HYP meet—which pitted traditional Heptagonal rivals Harvard, Yale, and Princeton—the California native collected wins in the 60 meter dash, 200 meter dash, and long jump with a 5.74 meter leap, 24 centimeters longer than her Hep finish last year. For the men, they’re hoping to rebound from a third-place finish...
...well are things going for sophomore goaltender Kyle Richter right now? Put it this way: technically, had Richter been the only Harvard player to suit up on Friday night against Yale, the Crimson still might have had a shot at a win. In his most well-rounded performance of the season, Richter stopped 37 Bulldog shots and surrendered just one goal—a loss he was able to recoup all on his own in the second period. As the last Harvard player to touch the puck on a Yale own goal, Richter was credited with the score, the first...