Men's soccer destroys BC
The men's soccer team won its fourth straight game yesterday, beating Boston College at Chase Field, 2-0.
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The men's soccer team won its fourth straight game yesterday, beating Boston College at Chase Field, 2-0.
Maslow has a theory on human needs. It is a pyramid -- at the bottom of the pyramid are physical needs, like food and clothing. At the middle are psychological needs like safety and security. In the middle is also a whole complex of other emotional needs like love, acceptance, acknowledgment and fulfillment. At the top of the pyramid is the ultimate human goal -- self actualization, whatever that means.
With about 60 percent of upper-class students affiliated with the Greek system here, the social life at Dartmouth centers around the 23 co-ed, fraternity and sorority houses.
Speaking on "The Jewish Question in France" in a lecture last night in Dartmouth Hall, anthropologist Judith Friedlander said Jews have fought for the last century to maintain their culture in a society that tends toward homogeneity.
Citing a variety of personal reasons, numerous women have depledged their sororities this term, a trend that leaders of the Greek system say reflects growing unhappiness with the system.
"Sunday in the Park with George," presented yesterday in Center Theater by Circa '21 productions, is a moving look into the lives of two artists and the various conflicts that love and art create in their lives.
On the chilly fields of Sachem this past Saturday, the Dartmouth women's rugby club continued it winning ways when they sent Ivy rival Radcliffe home defeated and dejected.
The men's and women's tennis teams took divergent paths this weekend. At the Eastern College Athletic Championship tournament at Princeton, the men's squad suffered a rare lack of form and lost, while the women's squad showed promise at the Brown Invitational.
Yet another Columbus Day has come and gone, and many of us are still unsure what to make of it. In fact, Columbus Day is the probably most paradoxical holiday in the United States.
In a time when cultural rifts plunge more people daily into abysmal depths of ignorance and hate, the College should be exceedingly grateful for the Native Americans at Dartmouth. This student group recently staged an exceptionally insightful and appropriate celebration of Native culture in the context of Columbus Day observance.
The Board of Trustees rewarded Daniel Lynch's commitment and contributions to the Thayer School of Engineering with an endowed professorship last July.
President Bill Clinton recently named Earth Sciences Professor Joel Blum as a 1993 Presidential Faculty Fellow for his research in geochemistry.
Acclaimed historian and international affairs expert Martin Sherwin '59 brings an active interest in promoting international unity to his new position as director of the Dickey Endowment for International Understanding.
A team of researchers at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center recently developed an antibody that stops body's immune system from attacking itself.
A new emphasis on quality at the College's buildings maintenance office has brought communicator Dick Boutin to campus.
Sergei Bassine '94 said when he returned home to St. Petersburg this summer it "was like a different planet" compared to the world he had known only a year ago.
Hinman mail box users must change their official mailing address by Jan. 1, postal administrators announced last week.
Moshe Arad, director general of Israel's Ministry of Communications, said in a discussion panel yesterday that the new Middle East peace agreement is ambitious but still leaves many social and economic problems to be solved.
The Student Assembly voted last night to recommend that the College lift economic sanctions against South Africa.
Irish-American Sir Alfred Chester Beatty ensured the preservation of his vast and impressive amassing of Asian art by bequeathing it in its entirety to the people of Ireland. Now selections from this rich vein of artistry have made their way to Hanover and are on display in the Hood Museum of Art.