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11.02.09.sports.mHockey
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$4 Coffee 2009-11-02
Touch the Fire 2009-11-02
Phreddie 2009-11-02
The Still North 2009-11-02
Daily Debriefing
Princeton University will lay off 43 employees by the end of this fiscal year as the result of a nearly 23-percent endowment loss, The Daily Princetonian reported on Friday. Almost 20 other employees will face involuntary work hour reductions. Faculty members are immune from the cuts, Princeton President Shirley Tilghman told The Princetonian. She also said that employees who are laid off will receive assistance finding new positions, The Princetonian reported. Princeton spokeswoman Cass Cliatt told the newspaper that this is the first time the university has had to lay off such a high number of employees in recent memory. Other colleges and universities have reported staff reductions due to endowment decreases: Harvard University will lay off 275 employees, Yale University announced it will cut 100 jobs and Stanford University will lay off 500 employees, according to the article.
Speaker stresses role of electronic health info.
Medical information technology is essential to improving the efficiency of the health care system, according to C. Martin Harris, chief information officer and chair of the information technology division at the Cleveland Clinic. Harris discussed the role of electronic medical records in health care reform in his lecture, held on Friday at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.
Activist works to protect Lake Baikal
The planned construction of a uranium enrichment center only 50 miles from Lake Baikal in Siberia poses an environmental threat to the world's oldest and deepest lake, according to Marina Rikhvanova, an internationally known environmental activist who co-founded the nonprofit Baikal Environmental Wave. Rikhvanova described her work to protect the lake, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, in her Friday lecture at the Haldeman Center.
Alumni reflect on LGBT history
In what event organizers said was an effort to show alumni that support for the LGBT community at the College has increased in the past 25 years, the Dartmouth Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Alumni/ae Association held its 25th anniversary all-class reunion this past weekend.
OAC student board to review minor cases
An Organizational Adjudication Committee student board will be formed by Winter term to hear allegations of minor misconduct involving student organizations, acting Dean of the College Sylvia Spears said in an interview with The Dartmouth on Friday. The full OAC, which includes students, faculty and administrators, will still convene for serious matters, including cases in which organizations may be removed from campus or face more than one term of probation, she said.
Indie darling Andrew Bird dazzles with whistles and violin
SOUTH BURLINGTON, Vt. Andrew Bird was meant to be a musician: He is a man of prodigious musical talent, and he reaches a new musical stratosphere with his intense and gracious devotion to his vocation.
Clusterfunk brings new take on classics to College
No sooner had the five members of Clusterfunk, campus' self-proclaimed "supergroup," strolled into The Dartmouth's offices than drummer Hyoung Yoon '10 cracked a joke.
Short Answer
The fact that students formed a committee this spring to advise College administrators on disability-related issues is a step in the right direction. Responsibility in this case falls both to students and to the College. Open communication and cooperation between students and administrators is critical to solving this issue. Blair Sullivan '10
Greek To Me
If you still haven't gotten a chance, you should read the first of Matt Ritger's series of Greek-life columns published in The Mirror ("The Gospel According to Matthew," Oct. 9). His two thesis statements conveyed his hope that someone will either pledge a fraternity and die in the process, bringing the godforsaken Greek system down with it, or at the very least that everyone should consider the unaffiliated life. For now, at least, the decision to pledge or not is irrelevant as hundreds of students have just committed to Greek life. The pertinent question for Dartmouth is where the Greeks will go from here, within the College and beyond it.
Basketball teams warm up for winter: Women's basketball
As the start to a new season for the Dartmouth women's basketball team approaches, expectations are high as ever for the Big Green. This year, the team is the preseason media pick to win the Ivy League.
Basketball teams warm up for winter: Men's basketball
Entering the 2009-2010 season, the Dartmouth men's basketball team faces a challenge in replacing star forward Alex Barnett '09, who averaged 19.4 points per game last season to lead the Ivy League.
Schwieger '12 out for the season
The Dartmouth football team followed up last week's win over Columbia with a 42-21 loss to Harvard yesterday in Cambridge, Mass.
Briefly Noted
Dan Freeman '10 won the A-flight singles and doubles titles for the Big Green this weekend at the Harvard Invitational. Freeman, along with Andrew Malizia '12, defeated teammates Chris Ho '12 and Mike Jacobs '13 in the doubles final. Kevin Cox '13 won the B-Flight singles, beating Harvard freshman Tunc Siymaz in straight sets in the final. It was the last competition of the fall season for the men's tennis team.