Dartmouth's defense held Yale running back Mike McLeod to 135 yards, but the Bulldogs scored four times off turnovers from the Big Green offense.
Search Results
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Turnovers plague Dartmouth as Yale cruises to Ivy win
With the loss, Dartmouth (0-4, 0-2 Ivy) is now last in the Ivy League standings, while Yale (3-1, 1-1 Ivy) is tied with Harvard University and Cornell University for third place in the conference. Brown, Harvard and the University of Pennsylvania are all tied for first place with identical 1-0 Ivy marks. Columbia rounds out the standings in seventh place with one Ivy loss.
Davis runs for ASL research funds
When restaurant manager Ben Davis lost a co-worker and a fellow triathlon runner to Lou Gehrig's Disease, he channeled his grief into a 2,175-mile run of the Appalachian Trail, spanning 60 days, to raise awareness of the disease and money for research.
Daily Debriefing
Inebriated students will now have more difficulty sending inappropriate e-mails to faculty members, parents and former consorts, thanks to the new Google application "Mail Goggles," the Chronicle of Higher Education reported. The new product, to be used in conjunction with Google Mail, forces users to solve a few simple math problems during "dangerous hours" for alcohol consumption, the default setting for which is from 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. If users are unable to solve the math problem, the program assumes the user is intoxicated and does not allow the message to be sent. "Mail Goggles" was named after the slang term "beer goggles," which refers to the tendency to consider prospective mates "inexplicably attractive" when inebriated, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.
Garre '87 takes office as solicitor general
Gregory Garre '87 was sworn into office as the new United States Solicitor General last week, replacing former solicitor general Paul Clement, who resigned in May. The solicitor general represents the federal executive branch before the Supreme Court and delegates cases pertaining to the federal government to the 20 attorneys in the solicitor general's office.
Voter suppression made felony in N.H.
Voter suppression -- purposefully preventing a specific group of people from voting -- is now a class B felony in New Hampshire, after a bill proposed by state Rep. David Pierce, D-Grafton, became law this spring. The issue of voter suppression has been closely tied to residents' efforts to prevent out-of-state college students from voting in New Hampshire.
Groups support return of ROTC to Ivy League
In the most recent incarnation of a controversy that has reappeared in various forms since the Vietnam War, advocacy groups continue their battle to reinstate the Reserve Officers Training Corps at the multiple Ivy League institutions where they are currently banned. Recent years have seen opponents of the ROTC raise objections on the grounds that the program, through its ties to the U.S. Armed Forces, legitimizes the military's policies regarding homosexuality.
Actor Kal Penn champions student activism for Democratic presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama in Fahey residence hall on Sunday.
'Kumar' rallies action for Obama
Penn appealed to the audience to take an active role in the upcoming election, urging them to volunteer as much as possible.
'Rock Band 2' fine-tunes gameplay, spotlights new genres
Anyone familiar with the many installments of the popular Guitar Hero series understands the problems that plague music-beat video games that establish a critically acclaimed franchise and a wide, devoted fan base.
Actress Laura Linney admitted to ignoring her critics in a question-and-answer session at Friday's tribute.
Emmy winner Linney receives Dartmouth Film Award
"A Tribute to Actress Laura Linney" began with a brief introduction by Bill Pence, director of film for the Hopkins Center of the Arts and co-founder of the Telluride Film Festival.
Voice Lessons
All of us, as adults or even as college students, articulate much more often by speaking than writing. Indeed, you would probably consider yourself a fairly good writer, but would you consider yourself a truly eloquent speaker? Can you structure an organized argument without the use of those darned words 'like', 'you know', and most obnoxious of all, 'um'? Have you resorted only to 'so good' and 'awesome' for everything you consider superb or excellent? Do you struggle to find the words to articulate abstract points?
DDS Choice Beef
We all have needs. The very thought of Maslow's Hierarchy -- hierarchy of needs, that is -- brings me back to high school psychology class. Painful memories aside, I propose a helpful hierarchy of my own.
Phreddie 2008-10-10
The Still North 2008-10-10
I Feel Like... 2008-10-10
Recycling To Riches
Expecting the frats to suddenly start recycling is like my fantasy of running table during Homecoming weekend while beautiful and wealthy female alumnae chant my name and throw their Hanover Inn room keys at me -- both scenarios are possible but highly improbable.
Verbum Ultimum: Buy It, Use It, Break it, Fix it
Dartmouth has a rich history as a leader of information technology innovation within the world of higher education. The BASIC programming language, the precursor to modern e-mail, and even the notion of artificial intelligence were all conceived here. In 2002, Wired magazine named Dartmouth "Unplugged U."
Overheard
'12 Guy: Don't f*ck with me! I'm passive aggressive!