Men's soccer drops chance at UVM revenge in 2-1 road loss
The road woes for the Dartmouth men's soccer team continued Wednesday afternoon as regional rival Vermont managed to take down the Big Green, 2-1, in Burlington, Vt.
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The road woes for the Dartmouth men's soccer team continued Wednesday afternoon as regional rival Vermont managed to take down the Big Green, 2-1, in Burlington, Vt.
After losing its first five games by a combined score of 18-3, Dartmouth field hockey has won three out of its last four contests and scored 14 goals.
Co-captain Kristen McCormick '09 described the game as fulfilling one of the team's main goals.
Allison Kay '09 and Sam Stimmel '09 are Health Services' Sexpert interns.
Let's start by explaining Sexperts.
Guilt -- yet another one of those emotions I'm incapable of feeling. The closest I've recently come was Beck's summer release, "Modern Guilt," an apocalypse-themed album sporting social and environmental awareness; but as much as I may try to mooch off of Beck's guilt, it's really his and not mine.
If you ask anyone in the "know" about Dartmouth's strongest quality, those in the "know" will answer back with, "the people."
A new report released by the American Council of Education on Thursday presented contradictory data regarding minority involvement in American higher education, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education. Despite recent increases in minority enrollment at American colleges and universities, stagnation in the percentage of students earning associate degrees is cause for alarm, according to the report. The report shows a significant racial and ethnic gap in degree earning. For the first time in the report's 23-year history, the percentage of black adults, ages 25-29, earning an associate degree or higher remained stagnant, and the percentage of Hispanic adults earning an AD declined. Asian-Americans and Caucasians continued to earn degrees at a higher rate than the previous generation. The report also states that total minority enrollment increased 50 percent between 1995 and 2005, with the increase in Hispanic enrollment leading all racial and ethnic groups. ACE president Molly Corbett Broad warned that "the alarm bells should be going off" over these findings, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported.
Every girl has an accessory fixation. There are the shoe fanatics who collect Louboutins and Jimmy Choos, the jewelry chicks obsessed with shiny baubles and the bag ladies who love a nice piece of arm candy. As a high school student, I was definitely a part of the last group -- buying bags like it was my job. While at Dartmouth, however, I became less preoccupied with purses, being that it is a less than ideal environment for the trendy pieces I used to love.
Listen Emily, (and this goes out to all you other Jews on campus) I get your point. I have a Jewish mother, too. My rebuttal? Try having a Jewish mother to nag you and an Irish-Catholic family on your father's side, and see if you can get through the day without being broken into two pieces by overwhelming waves of guilt.
Three Dell engineers visited campus Tuesday to resolve the jamming problems that have plagued Dartmouth's new GreenPrint printers since they were installed this summer. The Dell 5310n printers were selected as a potential solution to problems with GreenPrint's older Xerox printers, Elijah Gagne, Windows system manager for Technical Services, said. Though Technical Services received positive feedback initially, problems have started to occur as the printers are used more frequently this term.
Every time I speak to my great-aunt Helen, she says she forgot the sound of my voice because she hasn't spoken to me in years. This comment does not vary based on the length of time between phone calls; she's said it to me in the same mournful tone whether it has been months between contact or merely a day.
The Cultures of Democracy panel explores the effects of the humanities on democracy on Thursday.
"It's very important to plug the humanities into a broader political-socio connection," conference organizer Annabel Martn, a Spanish professor at the College, said in an interview with The Dartmouth. "The arts can contribute to our quality of life in a political sense."
As financial chaos whirls through the world, students and administrators at the Tuck School of Business await signs that might indicate whether the economic outlook is better -- or worse -- than commentators predict, as students prepare to enter the business world.
One time, I was really drunk when I came home, but I needed to take my birth control pill. But when I took it out, the pill fell on the floor. I figured I could feel around for it, so I didn't turn the lights on and eventually I found it and took it. When I woke up the next morning, I saw my pill lying on the ground. I have no idea what I ingested.
Dartmouth's 14 fraternities will open their doors to approximately 275 sophomore, junior and senior men for fall rush this weekend, according to Taylor Holt '09, vice president of recruitment for the Interfraternity Council. Beta Theta Pi fraternity will participate in recruitment for the first time since the chapter was derecognized by the College in 1996.
In honor of Yom Kippur, this week The Mirror turns its eyes on the guilt that plagues us all. When I told my mom about the theme she said, 'What does guilt have to do with Yom Kippur?!" Exactly, Mom. Exactly. And f*ck you for breast-feeding me until I was 5.
The average tuition at American universities has increased at a moderate rate over the past two years, according to a report released by the U.S. Department of Education Tuesday. The annual report, which used information from over 6,500 schools across the country, reported that private nonprofit universities experienced the largest cost escalations. Average tuition and fees for in-state undergraduates at four-year public universities were $5,749 for the 2007-08 academic year, a 5.3 percent increase from 2005-06, while public out-of-state costs were $13,630, up 3.4 percent. Textbooks, school supplies, housing and other expenses also increased in price. Private nonprofit universities saw average tuition and fees increase 6.7 percent to $19,337 and private for-profit institutions charged $14,782, a 5.2 percent increase after being adjusted for inflation.