W. laxers dominate Ivy awards
Two Dartmouth women's lacrosse players earned the Ivy League Player of the Week award on Monday after last week's strong performances.
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Two Dartmouth women's lacrosse players earned the Ivy League Player of the Week award on Monday after last week's strong performances.
Yesterday evening in the Rockefeller Center, Frederick Schauer '67 spoke on "Legal Principles, Legal Categories, and the Domains of Free Speech" to an audience of approximately 60 people.
This past weekend saw four teams sweep and four teams swept. The winners were Columbia, Cornell, Penn and Princeton. On the losing end were Brown, Dartmouth, Harvard and Yale.
Before this weekend, Dartmouth, Harvard and Penn stood in a precarious three-way tie for first place in the Ivy League. However, two unexpected upsets paved the way for the Big Green to take sole possession of the lead.
Penn 78, Harvard 76
While the steering committee report details a multitude of specific changes it hopes to see in the College's residential and social life, this is not the first time a report has been issued calling for substantial social change -- and not all have resulted in correspondingly drastic reforms.
Harvard 67, Cornell 57
The "heavies" of Ivy League men's basketball played their first conference contests of the season last weekend, with predictable results.
With the New Hampshire primary tomorrow, Vice President Al Gore now has a significant lead over his rival, New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley, according to a Dartmouth College-Associated Press poll released last Friday.
After 40 years at Dartmouth, the last of three generations of the Daniell clan will soon be leaving the College. Jere Daniell '55, professor of American history at Dartmouth for 36 years, will take the College-offered flexible retirement option this year.
With several Ivy schools breaking for exams, only two conference games took place over the weekend.
The Ivy League men's basketball season starts in earnest this weekend, and there are a few issues worth noting.
Much like last year, when Dartmouth went 2-5 over Winter break, the Green posted a losing record against out-of-conference opponents in five games between Dec. 11, 1999 and Jan. 2, 2000. Unlike last year, the Green lost their lone Ivy contest at Harvard, 66-59.
The new millennium has arrived and the race for the White House has begun, or rather continued, in earnest. The campaign activity over the last few months was only a warm-up for the primary showdowns that will occur over the next three months in NH, South Carolina, Michigan, California and New York. Presidential candidates Bill Bradley, John McCain, Al Gore and George W. Bush have put their campaigns into full gear with the hopes of building a strong momentum early in the New Year to carry them through the overloaded primary period.
It's that time of year again. Snow is falling outside your window. Jack Frost is doing his thing. The football team only has one game left to play.
This season, the men's soccer team has been lucky to have a big man on campus on their side.
For the Big Green men's soccer team, Homecoming weekend could mean two things. It could be a turning point when the Big Green finally find the intangible they've been missing up to this point, and start to win. Or it might not.
The preliminaries are all over. After three out-of-conference games Dartmouth (0-4) jumps right into Ivy League play tomorrow with a tough matchup at Yale (3-1).
The Steering Committee for the Social and Residential Life Initiative is in the process of reviewing the more than 250 pages of proposals that were submitted to the Task Force in response to the Initiative and will decide a course of action during the 1999-2000 academic year.
The Trustee Steering Committee for the Social and Residential Life Initiative will meet for the first time this term on July 10, and will begin discussing the more than 250 pages of proposals that were submitted by the Task Force last week.