Sir Malcolm Grant spoke at Dartmouth through the Montgomery Fellow program.
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The Danilack brothers, Hugh ’15 and Matt ’18, are keys to the soccer team’s success.
Number of arrests declines
The police arrested five students for alcohol-related incidents and two for disorderly conduct, down from last year’s 13 and three arrests, respectively, over Homecoming weekend. Monday marked the end of the Greek Leadership Council’s policy that freshmen cannot enter Greek houses serving alcohol for the first six weeks of the fall, and Safety and Security received no reports Monday night, director of Safety and Security Harry Kinne said. The number of reports over the weekend was typical for a big weekend, he said.
At the bonfire, officers arrested a non-student spectator for alcohol possession.
At Tuesday panel, students discuss faith
Graduating from a private Jewish high school, Elana Folbe ’15 found that practicing her religion was easier before she came to Dartmouth. During her freshman year, Folbe realized that she would have to make a stronger effort to find a Jewish community on campus.
Five students discussed their experiences with faith on Tuesday night.
Montgomery fellow talks U.K. health care
Despite the United Kingdom health system’s high patient satisfaction ratings — based on factors like short waiting times, comprehensive use of electronic medical records and universal access to health care — the system’s outcomes are not as good as they should be, said Sir Malcolm Grant, chair of England’s National Health Service and the College’s current Montgomery Fellow.
Sir Malcolm Grant spoke at Dartmouth through the Montgomery Fellow program.
New program links Tuck, IMD
A leadership program focused on executive education, run through the Tuck School of Business and Switzerland’s International Institute for Management Development, will launch next spring. The program, separate from Tuck’s full-time MBA program, aims to help experienced managers with more than 10 years of experience transition into business leadership positions, associate dean for executive education Sydney Finkelstein said.
Peters: Don’t Hijack the Paper
There is absolutely no doubt that the Greek system has become one of the biggest issues on Dartmouth’s campus. Whether a student is affiliated or unaffiliated, activist or ambivalent, the discussion is next to impossible to escape. The week prior to Homecoming, the paper’s editorial board invited those on campus to submit their takes on the system that defines social life at the College. Their survey was answered with opinions from across all corners of the student body. This helped create the 36-page Homecoming issue, an admirable undertaking that included many diverse voices from our community — and it was completely overshadowed by the editorial board’s hijacking of the paper with its approximately 1,100-word Verbum Ultimum.
Heussner: Power Trip
On Oct. 17, Homecoming Friday,The Dartmouthissued a Verbum Ultimum declaring that the Greek system should be abolished. The piece masquerades itself as progressive and brave, but in reality, it is a gross and reckless use of power.
Danilack brothers team up in Big Green soccer resurgence
A pair of brothers have been crucial in the men’s soccer team’s resurgent 2014 campaign. Co-captain Hugh Danilack ’15 and Matt Danilack ’18 both found soccer at a young age and began playing early in elementary school, eventually joining recreation leagues. As their talent deepened, they moved onto travel teams.
The Danilack brothers, Hugh ’15 and Matt ’18, are keys to the soccer team’s success.
Documentarian Krawitz screens ‘Perfect Strangers,’ visits classes
What motivates someone to give a part of herself away? What motivates someone to donate a kidney to a stranger?
17 Hours at Dartmouth College
Portsmouth, England. Oct. 17, 1714,8:00 p.m.My time machine is finally complete! Now I must travel 300 years into the future to discover a cure for the smallpox that has been plaguing the village. I need to do so quickly — this thunderstorm is growing bigger as we speak. I have the date and location programmed into the machine. I will write again from the future.
Dartmouth Admissions: Part Three
This is the third week of Dartmouth Admissions and I have effectively run through my list of people who owe me favors. So I've become that crazy person standing outside the admissions building yelling at people innocently trying to get lunch at Collis to “COME ADMIT SOMETHING TO ME.” Let me tell you, sounding like a crazy person is exhausting.
Community members gathered on the Green Monday to savor local apples.
Kayden Cook ’15 leaps high in the air for the set at Leede Arena. Cook had 32 assists in the weekend’s two games.
Hanlon, Dever stress improving faculty diversity at meeting
In five years, the College aims to have minority and international professors comprise 25 percent of its faculty. At Monday’s termly meeting of the faculty of arts and sciences, Provost Carolyn Dever and College President Phil Hanlon discussed increasing minority and international faculty at Dartmouth, describing it as a major priority to the around 200 faculty members in attendance.