Men's soccer closes frustrating season
With 20 minutes left in a game against Princeton on Oct. 17, the men's soccer team was cruising along with a 2-0 lead and enjoying what Coach Bobby Clark described as "the best soccer we played all year."
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With 20 minutes left in a game against Princeton on Oct. 17, the men's soccer team was cruising along with a 2-0 lead and enjoying what Coach Bobby Clark described as "the best soccer we played all year."
At George Mason University in Virginia last weekend, men's and women's cross country fulfilled their season-long goals and qualified for the NCAA tournament.
Dartmouth dormitory life has been disturbed by the nuisance of uninvited guests. The Office of Residential Life's pilot program to house graduate students in undergraduate dorms has stealthily infiltrated the domain of students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
On Tuesday night, J.S. Tambiah lectured on the relationship of saints and the concept of sainthood to religious communities.
In a group discussion on the Greek system sponsored by the Student Assembly last night, students said they want alcohol at Dartmouth social events and that women feel uncomfortable going into fraternity houses.
Plans for a new Jewish student center have been temporarily stalled because the architectural proposals exceed the cost and size specifications requested by the College and Hillel, the Jewish students' organization.
Members of co-ed Greek organizations last night discussed establishing a constitution that would mark the first step in a proposed secession from the Co-ed Fraternity Sorority Council.
The Student Assembly voted down a motion Tuesday night that recommended the creation of an affinity residence hall for students concerned about women's issues.
With only two and half weeks left until final exams, a visiting economics professor is leaving the College and will not finish teaching two sections of Economics 22, a course on macroeconomics.
In a lecture last night in Rockefeller Center Evelyne Accad, author of "Sexuality and War: Literary Masks of the Middle East," compared how men and women novelists writing about destruction in Lebanon, where she has lived and studied, react differently to war.
The first question that jumps to mind when looking back on the Big Green women's soccer season is: "What can they possibly do for an encore?"
After capturing the Ivy League championship last spring and ending the season with a 17-9-1 record, women's ice hockey looks to continue its momentum into this year's season.
Ever since Student Assembly announced the eferendum on single-sex houses in the Greek system, there has been a renewed debate about the best approach in discussing social options.
As I have a habit of bringing to light, the U.S. Army Reserve Officer Training Corps at Dartmouth is in imminent danger of dissolution because in some ways the U.S. Army's policies are not egalitarian, while Dartmouth has made a promise to its students to be an equal-opportunity institution in every respect.
The search for a treatment for breast cancer has led a Dartmouth senior and a professor from the Virgin Islands to Hanover to study marine organisms that preliminary research shows kill cancer cells.
Vladimir Lukin, ambassador of the Russian Federation to the United States, said democracy will eventually come to Russia, but not without hardship.
Students and Upper Valley residents participated in a road race and informational banquet Sunday to raise money for relief organizations worldwide and to learn about the planet's food shortage crisis as part of the first events of this year's Hunger Awareness Week.
Questions about water supply and traffic complications are haunting the developers of a proposed $15 million hotel and conference center scheduled to open in Hanover in 1995.
Dartmouth's reinvestment in companies that do business in South Africa, which was announced by the Board of Trustees after their fall meeting this weekend, was spurred by dramatic changes in the policies of the South African government over the past several years.
When Abe Rosenthal, the former executive editor of The New York Times, posted David Shipler '64 as bureau chief in Jerusalem, he thought he had broken tradition by assigning the Times' first Jewish correspondent there.