Men's soccer defeats Columbia on two Rothenberg goals
The Dartmouth men's soccer team nabbed a victory over Columbia Saturday evening, beating out the Lions 2-1. Dani Rothenberg '09 scored two goals to lead Dartmouth to the win.
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The Dartmouth men's soccer team nabbed a victory over Columbia Saturday evening, beating out the Lions 2-1. Dani Rothenberg '09 scored two goals to lead Dartmouth to the win.
Field hockey has dropped eight of its last ten games, and will look to right its ship against UMass on Wednesday.
It turned out Dartmouth supporters saw neither. Despite outshooting Columbia and having more penalty corners than Columbia did shots on goal, the Big Green could not capitalize when it mattered most, falling 2-0.
Dartmouth fought for 110 minutes, but this weekend's match against the Lions ended in a tie.
The draw brings Dartmouth's overall record to 3-8-2 and 1-2-1 in the Ivy League, while Columbia is now 6-4-4 overall and 1-2-1 in league play. The overall series record is now 17-2-3, in favor of Dartmouth. While historically, the Big Green has dominated the Lions, Columbia's soccer program has made strides, going 2-1-1 against Dartmouth over the past four years.
The Big Green pulled ahead of the Lions in the fourth quarter to secure a Homecoming win.
The Big Green (2-4, 2-1 Ivy) were in a familiar position after the Lions (1-5, 0-3 Ivy) drove 96 yards in six plays to tie the game at 28-28 with 9:54 remaining in the fourth quarter. Then a missed 28-yard field goal off of the right upright certainly put the Colgate game in the minds of many in attendance.
The Dartmouth women's volleyball team (12-6, 5-3 Ivy) had two more pitfalls this weekend as the team faced its toughest Ivy League competition to date and lost close games on Friday to Penn (12-7, 5-2 Ivy) and Saturday to Princeton (15-3, 7-0 Ivy).
Hudson Smythe '09
His green Converse high tops have white laces. His green-and-white striped socks are pulled up over his green-and-white striped wind pants, which are layered underneath a pair of athletic shorts -- one leg green, the other white. On the back of his white t-shirt, in green letters, is the slogan: "One College. One Tradition. Victory." Green leis adorn his neck, and a green cowbell hangs from a Dartmouth ribbon. His cheeks are painted with white and green stripes. A green bandana holds back a shoulder-length wig -- one half dyed white, the other green. He is screaming. And screaming.
It's not often that I agree with Dan Linsalata '07, but he was correct in stating that the lawsuit filed against the College by members of the Association of Alumni Executive Committee will bring nothing but national embarrassment to the College ("Giving does not demonstrate approval," Oct. 4). The lawsuit is foolish, likely to fail and for the good of the College must be dropped immediately. Beyond that, in order for the entire Dartmouth community to move forward, those executives who sued the College should resign.
Last Thursday, after a particularly long day of coffee-pouring and danish-slinging topped off with a fair bit of lab write-up hell, I was more than ready for the hearty dose of punk noise oblivion offered by Mika-Miko at Friday Night Rock. Though I looked forward to the release of my day's frustration, as a classical musician who prefers the lilting strains of 17th century Baroque music or the more "soothing" branches of indie rock, I was apprehensive about my relative ignorance of the punk music I was about to get blasted with.
ELIZABETH: THE GOLDEN AGE
CASEY AFFLECK as Robert Ford and BRAD PITT as Jesse James in Warner Bros. Pictures
Imagine a movie that stars Brad Pitt as the legendary outlaw Jesse James. Now take all the expectations you might have for such a film and turn them inside out. That's the best way I can think to describe "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford." The film contains no shootouts, no high-speed chases, no showdowns in dusty saloons -- nothing you might expect from a story about America's most notorious bandit. Instead, it offers nearly three hours of quiet, contemplative drama punctuated by seemingly endless shots of wheat fields and cloud formations. By turns fascinating and frustrating, "Assassination" isn't a very successful film, but it's one of the most interesting failures I've seen in a while.
To the Editor:
The protests in Burma are not going to have a direct effect on the Burmese military government. It would be naive of the demonstrators to believe that the government will be even remotely inclined to respond to the people's requests. This is, after all, the same government that killed thousands of Burmese students and monks during the 1988 protests. This is the same government that refused to step down from their leadership in 1990, ignoring election results in which democratic candidate Aung San Suu Kyi won 392 out of the 489 seats. This is the same government that put Suu Kyi under house arrest in 1990, where she remains today. To think that a peaceful demonstration by itself could end 46 years of corrupt military rule would be unrealistic.