Toe to Toe: Hodes versus Schmidley (Schmidley)
NFL quarterly report
NFL quarterly report
NFL quarterly report
Thomas Bukowski / The Dartmouth Staff Losing just isn't their style.
Jessica Griffen / The Dartmouth Staff Dartmouth men's soccer tied Yale 0-0 in a grueling double-overtime affair Saturday evening. After a frustrating loss to the University of New Hampshire last week, the Big Green was looking for a win in its Ivy League opener against the Bulldogs.
Let's play a word association game. I'll name a sport, and you shout out the first thing that comes to your mind.
In a game that the Dartmouth women's soccer team (3-7, 1-1 Ivy) needed to get back into the race for the Ivy League crown, the Big Green got a late winner from Maggie Goldstein '10 in the 86th minute to defeat Yale 1-0.
Jennie Post / The Dartmouth Staff Before Saturday's game against Yale, Dartmouth head coach Buddy Teevens outlined a list of goals for containing the potent Bulldogs offense.
Jess Thomas '09 Volleyball Thomas was an offensive stud in Dartmouth's weekend sweep of Yale and Brown, compiling 35 kills in the two matches.
Correction appended Baseball legend Babe Ruth once said, "The way a team plays as a whole determines its success.
IN THE VALLEY OF ELAH Years from now, when Americans shamefully survey the emotional and physical wreckage of the Iraq War, many will look back on "In the Valley of Elah" as the first film to successfully articulate our nation's anguish.
Courtesy of the Hopkins Center The world premiere of Merce Cunningham's "XOVER" at Moore Theater Friday night began with a revolution -- at least, in relative terms. After about 45 minutes of watching dancers stretch their arms in unforgiving, solid-colored Rauschenberg encasements, their suddenly sleeveless bodysuits seemed scandalously new.
On a humid autumn afternoon, the sun-bathed atrium above the Bentley Theater in the Hopkins Center was home to the kind of vibrancy that made Hop passersby peer in through the large windows and caused students fresh from Courtyard Cafe to work their way into the buzzing crowd. A throng of people had gathered to hear the words of Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, screenwriter and novelist Suzan-Lori Parks, who is the author of the hit Broadway play "Topdog/Underdog," a recipient of the MacArthur "Genius" Award and the first artist to visit the College via VOICES: The Dartmouth Theater Visiting Artist Program. "Suzan-Lori possesses a brilliant theatrical mind and amazing talent, and she is the perfect artist to help us launch the VOICES program in our inaugural year," said Bryan Joseph Lee '07, the program's associate producer. VOICES aims to create a space that honors and celebrates diversity onstage through student and faculty collaborations with professional artists. "She is a revolutionary artist because she challenges us to think about why we are who we are," Lee said.
"At the end of a Scenic Vermont road lies a cheese lover's paradise," the Boston Globe wrote about Sugarbush Farm in 1975.
Chuchu Ajukwu '10 Chuchu's rich chocolate half-zip sweater is complemented by buttery suede Tod's driving mocassins. If I were a girl, I'd be in: KDE because it's really the only one I've heard of. What's Hanover missing?
Grey Cusack '11 Grey makes the most of the warm weather and pairs blue short shorts with a slouchy white sweater and suede cowboy boots. If I were a boy, I'd be in: AD because I love their early-morning techno dance parties. What's Hanover missing?
'09 BG: "Maybe I would believe in God if it were a better lie." '08 Girl: "I'm so tired of reading Freud, I just want to go out and get drunk." '08 Boy: "COLLEGE!!!" '08 AD: "I think it would be more enjoyable to suck the penis than to go down on a girl." '08 KKG: "WHERE IS MY SLAM PIECE?" '09 Alpha Phi to another Alpha Phi: "Yeah, I want to have joint 'tails with Alpha Chi tomorrow, too, but [redacted's] ex is in that house, and I dont want to start burning any bridges in the house.
Book: "The God of Small Things" by Arundhati Roy Based on the author's own experiences in post-Partition India, this devastating narrative of the caste system wins readers' hearts with its unwavering veracity.
It doesn't matter who you are or what you like. If you listen to music, you are a music snob, and you might as well make things easier by admitting it now. There's just something about music that inspires conceited pretensions in people.
Before we get down to business, please allow me to introduce myself. My name is Maggie, I'm from the state of Minnesota, and I like sandwiches and brushing my teeth. I like shortcuts, too.