Big Green, Division III?
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Or James Wright's year-opening remarks as told by Dave Eggers.
By the good ol' days, of course, I am referring to last year. Back in the days when technology, while omnipresent, at least left us some remnants of independence and self-control. Back when these new-fangled devices and applications were not squeezing their way into every last nook and cranny of our lives. You remember what I'm talking about?
The total number of disciplinary cases referred to the College declined to 490 during the 2001-2002 academic year, down from 526 cases reported during 2000-2001. But accompanying the decrease in overall disciplinary cases was a noticeable increase in the number of severe punishments handed out.
Imagine waking up at 4:15 a.m., going to bed at midnight and passing the hours in between running obstacle courses, attending academic classes, practicing drills and undergoing intense mental pressure -- all under the hot Virginia sun.
Despite some students' complaints, Dartmouth's Career Services compares favorably with its equivalents at many peer school in terms of its scope, per-student spending and counseling, according to studies and administrators at these other offices.
Editor's note: This is the second installment in a series examining Dartmouth Dining Services' structure, quality and history.
Retired Dartmouth government professor and former executive director of the Academic Council on the United Nations System Gene Lyons argued in a lecture Wednesday that at this stage in international history, it is unwise for the United States to use unilateral military force against Saddam Hussein.
The criticism of Ben Folds has always been that he's too clever for his own good; critics have picked away at his penchant for sly humor. While he has written such cuttingly witty songs as "One Angry Dwarf and 200 Solemn Faces" and "Army" (both of which make an appearance on this album), he can also paint poignant portraits of desperate characters, and even bare his own soul and write in a deeply personal style.
The Dartmouth men's water polo team embarked upon its search for a second consecutive New England Championship during the weekend of Sept. 28, with wins over Tufts, Middlebury and Amherst. A loss to Boston College in overtime left the team in a three-way tie at the top of the league.
If the current tensions between the United States and Iraq weren't so deadly serious, the situation would be downright comical. It has all the makings of a Shakespearian farce: George W. Bush's impish smirk, hand-wringing diplomats at an impotent United Nations and Saddam Hussein's almost daily reversals on weapons inspection. Only the looming threat of an Iraqi nuclear attack intervenes to kill the humor.
I was raised on Manhattan's Upper-West Side and so did not see the planes hit that morning, and the towers falling or the subsequent fires. But I smelled the smoke. That night, a very acrid, artificial and out-of-place smell made its way north from Ground Zero.
In the middle of February in 2001, a female student happened to be walking by Psi Upsilon fraternity.
Dartmouth's alma mater touts the granite of New Hampshire. The governor of the Granite State has an ex officio seat on Dartmouth's Board of Trustees. The New Hampshire cold is something that College students proudly endure.
Dartmouth, with its serene location and Ivy League charm, doesn't exactly project a warlike image. But the College has a centuries-old relationship with the military that has at times sparked fierce debate.
Five minutes spent at the intersection of Main and Wheelock Streets would be enough to convince the casual observer that the Town of Hanover and Dartmouth College are inextricably linked.