<p>Save the couches!</p>
<p>Burn wood, not recliners. Stop couch abuse in its tracks. :)</p>
<p>Save the couches!</p>
<p>Burn wood, not recliners. Stop couch abuse in its tracks. :)</p>
<p>Ha..I think they banned couch burning.</p>
<p>Well, Wisconsin is #1 for lots of beer.</p>
<p>What happend to Wisconsin--they have moved to weekends only.</p>
<p>"FWIW, I've noticed a downward trend in partying at Wisconsin. Football Saturdays and Halloween still rage on, but weeknight drinking and Mifflin have really diminished over the last few years.</p>
<p>I had multiple friends who bartended at places like the KK, Brats, and Mondays who said they were really hurting compared to years past because their weeknight crowds (even on their big nights) were way down."</p>
<p>Which school would want to be known as a Party School?? If on top of that you happen to make the list also of "Students (Almost) never study" it is not going to be good news.. ( Univeristy of Florida )</p>
<p>My parents tell me that the University of Miami tried very hard to get rid off that reputation back in the 80s, when T shirts read Sun Tan U....</p>
<p>I'm very happy to see UW off the list. The admin has worked very hard to push kids to other activities and tighten up on classwork. It's all good. Party like mad on Fri/Sat and study Sun-Thurs.</p>
<p>I agree with barrons when it comes to UW. Despite weeknight drink specials at all of the bars, weeknight drinking is not a big thing(with the exception of the occasional thursday). Based on PR's criteria, Wisconsin probably shouldn't be on the list. Wisconsin likes its alchohol(which is why it is 1 for beer drinking), but Princeton Review also takes into account study time(even big partiers need to study quite a bit to get by at Madison) and greek life(I think only 10% of the student population at Madison). Certainly, people at Madison party hard and tend to take pride in that fact, but it does the school a disservice to look at it as a party school first and great school academically second.</p>
<p>
[quote]
Ha..I think they banned couch burning.
[/quote]
</p>
<p>Never.</p>
<p><a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=7tNcvSsqZlU%5B/url%5D">http://youtube.com/watch?v=7tNcvSsqZlU</a></p>
<p>Underrated: Rutgers, Wisconsin, Maryland</p>
<p>WVU has done me well; I've had fun in college and I've got a desirable degree.</p>
<p>ok, a better list has already been created, Any college thatCollege ****fest goes to is a party school, they don't need to be separate by any numerical order. They stand alone in a set alone and that is enough. </p>
<p>Even in the summer, every student is concerned with (well almost every student) beer, beer pong, parties and 420. It gets to be to much sometimes. But you can easily avoid it.</p>
<p>UCSB.</p>
<p>ah, good times.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>My dad, a crazy Badger alum who graduated in the early 70s, is in the computer room with me and wants me to add, "And Halloween... don't forget about the State Street Halloween Party!!"</p>
<p>Agreed.........</p>
<p>if halloween was ever a factor, UCSB should be number one, people travel from all over the west coast to come bringing the number to what, 100k people, or around the entire stadium for the wolverines</p>
<p>More like 30K according to the local papers. Madison had the only Halloween to reach near 100K.</p>
<p>30k was the estimated attendance in 1986.</p>
<p>The year after, the estimate increased by 5k. in 1990, the number was 40k, in 1994 they estimated over 50k, and it has continued to grow, but has dropped off recently</p>