Sailing team divides and still conquers competition
This weekend spread the Big Green sailors from the murky waters of Boston to the beautiful shores of Annapolis, testing the team's grit and drive in a mix of big breeze and light wind.
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This weekend spread the Big Green sailors from the murky waters of Boston to the beautiful shores of Annapolis, testing the team's grit and drive in a mix of big breeze and light wind.
After a strong third place showing at home in the Dartmouth Invitational held at the Hanover Country Club, the men's golf team hit a road bump this weekend at the MacDonald Cup, held at The Course at Yale in New Haven, Conn.
The Big Green ended a three-game losing and a four-game winless streak. Daniel Keat '10, the team's leading goal scorer, tallied the winning goal, his fourth of the season, in the fifth minute of overtime play. The win will provide some relief for the Big Green players, who were recently criticized for their inability to convert their scoring chances.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
While mostly accurate, Zak Moore's op-ed ("Elitism, Not Intellectualism," Oct. 5) misses some very important points. As an "ultra-liberal" elitist, I would like to point out some of those glaring deficiencies. Like my fellow "pseudo-intellectual" associates, I am indeed an atheist; but as Moore neglected to mention, we also worship Satan (we do run into ideological hypocrisy worshipping Satan while still rejecting the existence of God, but we manage).
Most students at Dartmouth are aware of the fact that "Animal House" co-writer Chris Miller was a member of the Class of 1963 at this college, as well as a member of the Alpha Delta fraternity. They also know that many of the situations depicted in the film were loosely based on Miller's experiences as part of a fraternity here at Dartmouth. With over half the campus involved in the Greek system, association with the film is probably a source of pride for the average Dartmouth party-goer.
John H. Wasson, professor of community and family medicine at Dartmouth Medical School, is working with a team of researchers to help physicians lower the cost of running their practices and to increase patients' role in maintaining healthy lifestyles. He is conducting the research with the St. Louis Area Business Health Coalition and Primaris Missouri's health quality improvement organization. A focus of the project will be on improving the efficiency of physicians' offices by utilizing fewer staff members. Wasson's research has found that by cutting expenses, physicians can spend more time with each patient. The Commonwealth Fund is helping to pay for the project, which will last 18 months and begin on Jan. 1.
Montgomery Fellow Romila Thapar, the preeminent historian of ancient India, fought against Indian nationalism and death threats to chronicle her country's intricate multicultural history. Author of the much-lauded book Early India, she will give a lecture entitled "Interpretations on Early Indian History" at 4:30 p.m. today in Filene Auditorium.
"We could call you Maddy or Dommy," Boylan said one of her sons suggested. "Dommy didn't stick but Maddy did."
Editor's Note: This is the first in a two-part series that examines credit cards and student debt at both a national level and at Dartmouth.
The Faculty Steering Committee did not reveal a verdict that would determine BlitzMail's future, but it did discuss the issue of continuity within the committee's leadership as well as usual updates from the Councils on Computing and Graduate studies to name two.
Fraternities and sororities handed out bids Saturday, Sunday and Monday, ending the week-long rush process this fall. While fraternities generally received numbers comparable to previous years', sororities received fewer members per house with the addition of Alpha Phi, the seventh sorority, and a smaller group of female rushees this year.
WEB UPDATE, October 10, 4:55 p.m.
Kidman's publicist, Wendy Day, told the press that "Nicole has never met David Thomson. She has only spoken to him briefly on the phone about her acting processes and various films. He's a well-respected film writer and she accepted the interview only because she was under the impression he was writing a series of film essays."
Imagine my surprise when I discovered that "The Departed" is not an Ozzy Osbourne biopic, but a gritty crime drama set on the mean streets of South Boston. Nicholson plays Frank Costello, an Irish mobster with a lust for power and a somewhat eccentric personality. The movie opens with Costello, understandably wary of law enforcement, embedding one of his most loyal henchmen into the ranks of the Massachusetts State Police to act as an undercover saboteur. The henchman is Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon), a man whose intelligence and chiseled jawline allow him to rise with alarming speed to the highest ranks of the department.
The Dartmouth equestrian team placed higher than seven of the ten schools at the Middlebury Horse Show.
Whitney Douthett '07 helped lead a staunch defensive effort for the Big Green in a 1-0 win over Yale Sunday.
Football struggled to get any offensive production in the first half of play.