Word: survey
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University presidents’ salaries continue to rise nationwide but leaders of the most prestigious private institutions aren’t necessarily at the front of the pack, according to a survey published yesterday by the Chronicle of Higher Education...
...pick up the receiver to the red phone and spatter some drool across the mouthpiece (cheers, future residents of Leverett G-25), unwittingly imitating Ronald Reagan making his final nuclear crisis-defusing call to the Kremlin. “Do you have time to take a short, two-minute survey?” the voice at the other end asks...
This was me on November eleventh, and it probably was you, too. Someone, I’m not sure who, is conducting phone and paper surveys about the feasibility of providing pay-based cleaning services for student bedrooms and common rooms. The phone survey, however, isn’t so much aimed at figuring out whether there is a market for such a service. Rather, many of the questions are worded to divine whether the service would be economically divisive amongst students. The sparkling single of a New York blue-blood and the ratty double of two dudes from downstate...
Supervisor of Student and Residential Computing Kevin S. Davis ’98 said he thinks that many of the questions asked on the survey were out-of-date or irrelevant...
Eating lots of fruits and vegetables is sound advice for anyone, but according to a new study in Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention, it may be particularly valuable for older women. A survey of nearly 3,000 New York City--area women, about half of whom had developed breast cancer, suggests that eating at least 35 servings of fruits and vegetables a week can cut the risk of developing hormone-stimulated breast-cancer tumors by 35% in postmenopausal women. The University of North Carolina epidemiologists who led the study say leafy greens and colorful vegetables like carrots, squash, tomatoes and peppers...