Women's tennis shuts out UMass
The win concluded the Winter portion of the season for the Big Green (10-1, 0-0 Ivy), which has won three straight dual matches.
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The win concluded the Winter portion of the season for the Big Green (10-1, 0-0 Ivy), which has won three straight dual matches.
Editor's note: Thanks to the storm of industry politics surrounding the Academy Awards, it often seems that the winners are decided even before the nominees are announced. This year, we're sick of the politics. Here's what would happen if staff members Allie Bosch, Jackie Donohoe and Alec Brodsky could choose the winners along with the general consensus of critics nation-wide, just in case you need some advice for your Oscar pool.
"That really introduced me to the whole drama of Tolstoy's last years," Parini said of his discovery of the diaries, in an interview with The Dartmouth.
I sat down with Chris Hanson '13 and Nick Sisodia '12 the top two Dartmouth men's squash players to discuss controversy and the upcoming individual tournament.
Northern Stage, a regional nonprofit theater based in White River Junction, Vt., began its run of "Damascus" on Feb. 17 at the Briggs Opera House. The play will run through March 7 with 13 more performances.
I sat down with Dana Brisbane '12 to talk about Dartmouth women's lacrosse, the team's upcoming season and lax culture at Dartmouth.
Shamberg's adaptation of the book resulted in "Extraordinary Measures," which was released Jan. 22.
I sat down with Dan Freeman '10 to talk about the final tennis season at Dartmouth for both him and head coach Chuck Kinyon.
"No experience is necessary for the workshops. We actually prefer to have beginners work with us they are easier to train," he said jokingly.
I recently sat down with Kirk Crecco '12 to discuss the state of Dartmouth men's basketball and his expectations for the rest of the season.
I sat down with Brendan Norris '12 and Nick Resendes '12 to talk about the world of Dartmouth track and field.
I sat down with Henry Luehrman '12 and Ian Accomando '12 to talk about Dartmouth lightweight crew.
Renowned scientific researcher Paul Zamecnik '33, who is credited with the discovery of a molecule critical for protein synthesis, died Oct. 27 of cancer in his home in Boston at the age of 96, according to his daughter, Elizabeth Coakley. Zamecnik, long considered a front-runner for the Nobel Prize, enrolled in Dartmouth Medical School at the time a two-year program in 1934, and later finished his medical degree at Harvard University, where he spent the majority of his career.
I sat down with Brittney Smith '11 and Margaret Smith '10 to discuss the success of the Dartmouth women's basketball team over the past few years and the players' outlook for the season.
In what may be a vote of redemption for much-maligned text messaging, a recent study by a team of economists, including Dartmouth economics professor Jonathan Zinman, has found that when individuals received text messages reminding them to save, their account balances increased on average by 6 percent.
Beloved animation professor David Ehrlich, an 18-year veteran of the film and media department, announced earlier this year that he plans to leave Dartmouth at the end of the Fall term in order to pursue a teaching opportunity at an art and design college on Gulangyu, a tropical island off the coast of South China.
I sat down with Big Green wide receiever Michael Reilly '12 and discussed his time on the team this season and the team's recent successes.
By Jack BarrettThe Dartmouth StaffI sat down with Will Lehmann '12, Paul Jarvis '12, and Nate Brakeley '12 to talk about rugby's most recent success: yet another Ivy League championship.
In an effort to encourage students to seek help for their intoxicated peers, Dartmouth College Democrats are working with local state representatives to implement a state-wide "Good Samaritan" law. The law modeled on the College's Good Samaritan Policy would make it more difficult for police to arrest intoxicated students in need of medical attention, addressing what is now a major disincentive for students who consider calling for help.
Veteran German director Ulrike Ottinger has taken a ethnographic approach to examining weddings with her latest work, which focuses on the complex rituals and mores of marriage in Korea. Her documentary film, "The Korean Wedding Chest," was presented in Dartmouth's Loew Auditorium last Friday, fresh from the Berlin Film Festival.