Women's golf off to quick start
A young Dartmouth women's golf team finished an impressive fourth in a field of 13 teams at the Dartmouth Invitational at the Hanover Country Club On Sunday.
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A young Dartmouth women's golf team finished an impressive fourth in a field of 13 teams at the Dartmouth Invitational at the Hanover Country Club On Sunday.
Dartmouth Volleyball may only have eight returning players this year, but the Big Green are already looking forward to a spectacular season.
In the last few weeks before returning to Dartmouth, I had the misfortune of attending a local Republican rally with my father who is running for local office. Political events of this sort are generally tolerable -- eat fried chicken, smile, nod, say "It's a school in New Hampshire" a few thousand times, leave.
You know what?" I asked Cheryl, "This stinks." We were both sitting on my bed in my tiny single, poring over our ORCs in an attempt to get our lives in order.
To the Editor:
Today, I'd like to kick off the year by risking offending a group of people whom it could be dangerous to offend.
Welcome back to school, to Hanover, to Dartmouth. Yes, it's time for Fall term again. Fall term is really the most unique term at Dartmouth. You have a bunch of clueless 'shmen shmobbing around, a ton of sophomores rushing houses they've been to twice, barely any juniors, and seniors running into each other for the first time in years. Ah, to be home again.
The Dartmouth College Library has obtained a rare copy of an 1830 book written by Daniel Webster, with a brief message penned by Webster on one of the volume's front pages.
"Nineteenth-Century American Poetry," an anthology compiled by English Professor William Spengemann and Jessica Roberts '97, and due out in October, is a book that almost never came into existence.
This year marks Dartmouth Medical School's bicentennary -- a celebration that began with Convocation exercises Tuseday and will end next September with a bicentennial symposium.
A College-sponsored insurance policy has thwarted Alpha Delta fraternity's attempt to build a 15-foot-high 'treehouse' on its property -- a project that has received recent attention in regional papers.
In a speech marking the beginning of a two-day conference on the Russian and American legal systems, U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Souter said the commonalties of the American and Soviet legal systems will provide the focus for the conference.
"Trainspotting," a film by new Scottish director Danny Boyle, is certain to shatter quaint images of Scotland, the land of kilts and bagpipes.
Just a few hundred yards away from the din and noise of the Ledyard bridge is a site where silence is predominant. Wielding trowels and brushes, six individuals crouch over and in square holes dug out of the earth seeking to recover and reconstruct the lifeways of people who lived here more than a century ago.
Field Hockey: The women's field hockey team hired a new assistant coach late in August. Sue Daddona replaced Amy Fowler who left Dartmouth to take a position at James Madison. Daddona was a University of Delaware graduate where she excelled in both field hockey and lacrosse.
When the men's soccer coach, Fran O'Leary, talks about the upcoming season, he likes to talk a lot about goals. And he's not just talking about the kind of goals where the ball gets past the keeper. He's talking about an improvement over last season's disappointing 6-11 record. He's talking about a drastic turnaround. And most of all, he's talking about a new and improved Big Green soccer squad.
As the rain began to fall yesterday afternoon at Chase Field, the women's soccer team would do anything but the same as they held strong to defeat the University of New Hampshire 2-1.
Though the grassy green fields behind Thompson Arena are a far cry from the highlands of his native Scotland, Neil Orr, the new interim coach of the women's soccer team, feels very much at home on them. They are real soccer fields after all, lined and sized the same way in America as they are in Scotland. And Neil Orr is by all accounts a real soccer player.
Summer lives on in the hearts of one group of Dartmouth athletes. The Big Green sailing team refuses to let fall set in and will not be bothered by the typical, chilly Hanover weather as they prepare for a long fall season filled with numerous weekend regattas.
To the Editor: