Kemeny landscaping nears finish
After roughly a year of work, the noise and dust emanating from behind Haldeman and Kemeny Halls will disappear as the landscaping project enters its final stages.
After roughly a year of work, the noise and dust emanating from behind Haldeman and Kemeny Halls will disappear as the landscaping project enters its final stages.
Dartmouth's student athletes elected seven new members to the 10-member executive board of the Student Athlete Advisory Committee last week. The SAAC was created "to provide student athletes with a voice in the Dartmouth College Athletic Department, as well as foster communication regarding issues that impact the student athlete experience," according to Dartmouth's Athletic Department web site. In order to run for a position on the executive board, a student athlete must nominate oneself or be nominated by a teammate. The candidates then present statements to a general assembly meeting of Dartmouth's student athletes, who vote to elect the new members. The new members of the SAAC executive board are Sean Milich '09, Pavel Sotskov '09, Christina Clark '10, Lucretia Witte '10, Catherine Armstrong '10, David Fink '11 and William Greif '11. Three members of this year's executive board -- Caitlin MacDonald '09, Ted Newhouse '09 and Jeffrey Friedman '10 -- were elected to serve again next year. This year, 15 athletes were nominated for the 10 executive board spots, including three returning board members. In past years, executive board members have appointed a president, vice president and treasurer from within the group after the members had been elected. Last year, however, the board decided not to appoint these positions, but rather to share duties according to which members could take on the most responsibility at a given time. The executive board, according to MacDonald, greatly influences the issues and events the SAAC handles. "I really like the flexibility that we have as a group in terms of what we can do," MacDonald said. MacDonald, a member of Dartmouth's women's soccer team, cited the need to "establish positive relationships between athletics and academics" as one of the most important functions of the committee. The SAAC also functions as a liaison between the athletic department and student athletes. "We want student athletes to feel comfortable coming to us with their thoughts and concerns so we can relay them to the administration," Jen Murray '09, a former member of the SAAC executive board and a member of Dartmouth's women's tennis team, said. According to Murray, the allotment of practice time in Leverone Fieldhouse is a contentious issue that comes up almost every year among athletes. "We advertise ourselves as an open forum for student athletes with any type of issue, in hopes that in the future athletes will be more willing to come to the committee with concerns or administrative problems," Murray said. Along with serving as a channel between administrators and athletes, the SAAC has attempted to broaden its impact on campus by reaching out to those athletes. "We do a lot of social events planning along with administrative work," MacDonald said.
Kasia Vincunas / The Dartmouth Staff Tractors and backhoes have invaded the area next to Burnham Field to break ground for the College's new field hockey field.
Courtesy of Rebecca Treat Ward / The Dartmouth Staff Rebecca Treat Ward '08 doesn't think of herself as an artist. "See these hands?"she says, in her soft-spoken voice.
Recently, I've been fond of analogies. While my last column was about the parallels between DASH and sex, this week's topic demands more subtlety. One of Dartmouth's greatest weaknesses is the lack of sustainability.
To admit that you have not heard mention of the name Madeline McCann is to confess that you haven't picked up a newspaper or watched televised news broadcasting in the past year.
Samuel B. Roberts, master mason for the College, is currently dismantling and rebuilding the stone structure outside of McNutt Hall.
SEBASTIAN RAMIREZ-BRUNNER / The Dartmouth Staff Citing the 34 million layoffs in the U.S.
Andy Foust / The Dartmouth Staff Multinational organizations such as the United Nations, the European Union, and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization are crucial to international politics and must be used to address the many issues today that transcend national borders, Sir Emyr Jones Parry, this year's 1950 Dickey Lecture Senior Foreign Affairs Fellow, said Thursday.
After speculation and an inconclusive search attempt by a Dartmouth earth sciences class, Hanover Police officer Rick Paulsen has laid speculation surrounding a missing World War I cannon to rest.
Eighty four percent of students have enrolled in D-Pay, Dartmouth's new electronic billing system, according to Ronald Hiser, director of Student Financial Services.
A cartoon depicting Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., finding simple solutions to problems too complicated for President George W.
Following the most competitive admissions year in the College's history, 1,120 students plan to matriculate in the Class of 2012, according to Maria Laskaris, dean of admissions and financial aid. The matriculating group -- 560 men and 560 women -- represents a 51 percent yield from the 2,190 admitted students, Laskaris said, compared to the 53 percent matriculation rate of those admitted to the Class of 2011.
Dartmouth's men's soccer team will welcome six recruits with the Class of 2012, according to a recent announcement.
Jennifer Argote / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Dartmouth men's and women's track and field teams finished their regular seasons at the Ivy League Heptagonal Championship in New Haven, Conn., this weekend.
To the Editor: Tom Mandel '11 is on the right track when he notes the peculiarity of Dartmouth's "ultra-fratty" vocabulary ("Concordantly Fratty," May 6). I object, however, when he calls this language "dumbed down." In my years as an observer of campus basement culture, I have come to realize that our speech patterns are nuanced and intellectually revealing. The words themselves are simple and crude, but the irony Mandel hears in the speech of freshmen does not disappear over time.
Twenty-six days are all that separate this writer from joining the hallowed ranks of Dartmouth's alumni network.
A great, unsung hero of the Civil Rights movement passed away last weekend. Mildred Loving was the plaintiff in a 1967 Supreme Court case, Loving v.