Devens '96, outstanding College athlete, dies at 21
Sarah McKnight Devens '96, one of the best female athletes ever to attend Dartmouth, died unexpectedly this summer at her home in Essex, Mass.She was 21.
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Sarah McKnight Devens '96, one of the best female athletes ever to attend Dartmouth, died unexpectedly this summer at her home in Essex, Mass.She was 21.
With a little more than 1,000 students on campus, summer should have been a quiet term at Dartmouth. Instead, a presidential visit, a controversial new student publication and the death of a star athlete kept Dartmouth in the national media spotlight the entire term.
In just 20 seconds on Sept. 9, one of the largest buildings on campus imploded and collapsed to the ground, leaving behind nothing but a large pile of concrete debris.
The Yankee Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America presented College President James Freedman with its Yankee Award last night in Bedford.
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop '37 told members of the Class of 1999 that new medical education and technologies will enable doctors to provide better care in the future, putting patients' health over cost cutting and political wrangling.
Students going to the Hopkins Center for the Performing Arts for registration today will be greeted by Student Assembly members working in conjunction with representatives from the Hanover Green Card and College Promo-Pack.
Despite brisk sales of Playboy's "Women of the Ivy League" pictorial, most students said the issue is not making much of an impression on campus.
Playboy Magazine's "Women of the Ivy League" issue, which includes pictures of Xantha Bruso '97 and Shannon Smith '96, is rapidly disappearing from the shelves of local stores.
Dartmouth inched up to seventh place in U.S. News & World Report magazine's annual survey of national universities and ranked first in a new "teaching" category.
To the Editor:
South Carolinians are happy tonight.Frommy room here on East. Wheelock, if I'm really quiet, I can almost hear the rebel yells from my hometown.
It was freshman week, and, like most of my classmates, I was wandering around Tuck Drive amidst the Dartmouth Dining Services' barbecue in search of my faculty adviser. Unable to find him, I stumbled upon one of his colleagues, who informed me that he was out of the country and was unsure when he'd return. I figured that this minor setback was just a small mishap which probably didn't happen very often. I didn't complain. I just waited for my advisor to blitz me. And he didn't. So I blitzed him.On the day of our appointment, I waited 30 minutes past our appointment time until he showed up and when we finally began to discuss class choices, he not once mentioned my language requirement which I hadn't started to fulfill. Needless to say, this wasn't a stellar first college advising experience, but it didn't occur to me that my peers might have also had similar experiences.
Fourteen professors, including five new faculty members, received tenure at the College effective July 1.
In fewer than four weeks yet another round of freshmen will descend upon Hanover to begin their Dartmouth careers.
Two weeks ago, sorority sisters and fraternity brothers ate hamburgers and mingled on the well-kept lawn of the nicest house on fraternity row at the invitation of College President James Freedman.
Six students will travel across the globe to places like Calcutta, Katmandu and Ethiopia to do community service as Tucker Fellows this fall.
By expanding student services, the Summer Student Assembly accomplished many of its goals this summer and hopes to serve as a model for this year's Assembly.
A small group of students is working tomake Latino Studies a permanent part of the College's curriculum.
Fall term Artist-in-Residence Jake Berthot, an abstract painter who lives and works in New York, will display some of his work in the Jaffe-Friede and Strauss Galleries at the Hopkins Center next term.
Adam Nelson '97 has one of the biggest necks, pound-for-pound on campus.