UMass Amherst tops the list (again) for best campus food, according to The Princeton Review
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'This achievement is a testament to the dedication and passion of our students, faculty members, staff, culinary team and university administration,' Toong said in a statement.
The Princeton Review rankings cover 50 categories, including LGBTQ-Friendly (No. 1 was College of the Atlantic in Bar Harbor, Maine) and Best College Newspaper (Emerson College ranked No. 2, after Columbia University) and Best College Theater (Emerson College snagged second place for this, too, behind Wagner College in New York).
The rankings were based on surveys of 170,000 students at 391 schools, and how those students answered specific questions about their schools.
The rankings can be viewed online and in 'The Best 391 Colleges: 2026 Edition'
book that went on sale Tuesday.
Rob Franek, editor-in-chief of The Princeton Review and the book's lead author, said the colleges that make the ranking lists are 'a truly select group' that represent about 15 percent of nearly 2,400 four-year institutions in the country.
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'The colleges that make our ranking lists do so entirely as a result of their own students' opinions of them,' Franek said in a statement. 'We don't rank colleges based on our opinion of them nor would we crown a school 'best' overall. It is what the students attending the colleges in this book tell us about their experiences at their schools that determines on which lists the schools appear in our book.'
Emily Sweeney can be reached at
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Boston Globe
7 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Four big reveals from Taylor Swift's ‘New Heights' podcast episode with Jason and Travis Kelce
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Swift revisits the emotional journey of buying back her master recordings Swift opened up to the Kelce brothers about the emotional process of 'I always refer to it as 'I got my music back this summer,' but I never owned my music at all,' Swift said, noting that she signed her record deal at age 15, and that many artists don't own their masters. Advertisement The singer revealed that she'd been saving up to buy her master recordings since she was a teenager, and that she was devastated when her former label, Big Machine, sold them to music executive Scooter Braun in 2019. At the time, Swift criticized the deal in a 'It really ripped my heart out of my chest, and I told everyone exactly how that felt for me and what I was going through,' Swift told the Kelce brothers. 'I started basically, defiantly, re-recording my music because I wanted to own it, and this was the only way I thought it was ever going to happen.' While she was excited to re-record her albums, Swift admitted to thinking about not owning her music 'every day.' Swift pursued purchasing the master recordings following the conclusion of her 'Eras Tour,' after deciding with her team to approach Shamrock Capital, the private equity firm that bought them from Braun. However, she didn't want to strike a deal to own a percentage of the master recordings, and instead hoped to buy them outright. 'I want to own all of it,' Swift said, noting that it was a 'long shot' that 'they would sell that asset to me.' Swift started to tear up while talking about her family's role in helping her strike the deal, revealing that she sent her mother and brother — rather than lawyers or managers — to speak with the firm. The singer said that her family helped convey how much the music meant to her on a personal level. Advertisement 'I'm in the business of human emotion,' Swift said. 'I would so much rather lead heart-first in something like this.' A few months after the Super Bowl, Swift got a call from her mother while hanging out with Travis in Kansas City. 'She's like, 'You got your music,'' Swift said. 'I just like, very dramatically hit the floor, for real, like honestly just started bawling my eyes out.' The singer then ran to the room where Travis was playing video games and broke the good news to him through tears. 'I started crying too, you know I'm a crier,' Travis said. 'I was just so happy for you.' Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, right, appears with singer Taylor Swift after the Chiefs victory over the Buffalo Bills in the AFC Championship game in Kansas City, Mo., on Jan. 26. Charlie Riedel/Associated Press 3. Swift and Kelce share their love story The couple didn't shy away from talking about their relationship, including how Travis tried to get Swift's attention before they started dating in what she called the 'shooting your shot heard 'round the world.' The Chiefs star famously admitted his interest in her on the podcast in 2023, when he talked about trying (and failing) to give Swift a friendship bracelet with his number on it at one of her concerts. 'This podcast got me a boyfriend, ever since Travis decided to use it as his personal dating app about two years ago,' Swift joked. 'He threw a man-tantrum, it's so funny,' she later added. 'It was such a wild, romantic gesture to just be like, 'I want to date you!'' Swift pointed out how Travis never reached out to her management team, and that she didn't know about the attempt until the 2023 podcast came out. 'I was like, 'Did he ever reach out to be, like, in the tents, or did we know he was in the building?'' Swift said. 'He came with Pat [Mahomes], and he thought that because he knows the elevator lady that he could talk to her about getting down to my dressing room.' Advertisement 'That's how it works in 1973,' she joked. 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Boston Globe
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- Boston Globe
Two former child stars unite in Hulu's ‘Count My Lies'
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Boston Globe
17 hours ago
- Boston Globe
On James Baldwin and the power of love
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