Football squeaks by Quakers in final seconds
The Ivy League media's preseason poll had tabbed this as the game of the year -- a showdown between preseason favorite Dartmouth and runner-up Pennsylvania.
The Ivy League media's preseason poll had tabbed this as the game of the year -- a showdown between preseason favorite Dartmouth and runner-up Pennsylvania.
The 1996 field hockey team entered this season plagued with doubt and sheer inexperience. Having lost six starters to graduation and one senior tri-captain to a season-ending back injury, the Dartmouth women were suppose to enter a rebuilding stage. But the rebuilding stage for the Big Green was short-lived, as several younger players have stepped up their play and disputed any doubt in this year's squad.
With seven of the top eight scorers returning from the 1995 Big Green women's soccer team, it is no wonder that it was a total team offensive effort that powered Dartmouth to a 5-1 win over the visiting University of Pennsylvania last Saturday. Kate Andrews '96 scored on a penalty shot after a red card was given to Pennsylvania's Heather Herson with 5:34 left in the second half to make the score 3-1. That goal broke open a one -goal game and killed any momentum the Quakers might have built up.
After a long sabbatical, the upperclass facebook has returned. The Student Assembly will sell its facebook, "Mugshots," at registration today. Mugshots will replace the Dartmouth Over the Hill facebook which was discontinued after the 1994-1995 academic year. Like the previous facebook, Mugshots will feature pictures of the members of the sophomore, junior and senior classes at Dartmouth in a fashion similar to the freshman Green Book, Assembly President Jon Heavey '97 said. The facebook lists students by class with their addresses, majors and Dartmouth Plans, but does not include designations of Greek houses under students' pictures.
New book helps to define the president's 'triangulation strategy' between the Democrats and Republicans
To the Editor: Since my arrival on campus, my class, the class of 2000, has been referred to as "zeros," "double zeroes," "naughts" and "nothings." According to all the literature that we were sent in the mail over the summer, the impession is given that we would get to name ourselves.
If someone said that Penn beat Penn at the men's soccer game on Saturday, one probably might look at them funny.
So the freshmen have arrived. And the question still lingers as to what to call them. 2000s? Class of Nothing?
Laurel Stavis, director of public affairs and government relations at Wellesley College, will become the College's first director of public affairs next month. The job is "a broadening and heightening of what used to be called news director," said Roland Adams, the acting director of the News Service. In the new expanded role of director, Stavis will head the Public Affairs Office and serve as the Dartmouth's liaison between the President and the media as Dartmouth's principal communications officer, according to a College job description. After a year-long search following Alex Huppe's resignation from the position of news director last fall, a committee chose Stavis out of a pool of nearly 200 candidates to fill the position, said Senior Assistant to the President Peter Gilbert, who headed the search committee. "As director of public affairs, Laurel Stavis will lead a new era in Dartmouth's communications with its various constituencies, taking on a broadened portfolio of responsibilities and coordinating an array of communications efforts throughout the institution," said College President James Freedman in a statement released by the College. Stavis said she is looking forward to coming to the College. "I have admired the Dartmouth News Service from afar, and one of the things I most look forward to is working with them," Stavis said. When asked if she had any special projects planned, Stavis replied that she plans on doing "a lot of listening to a lot of different people." She added that "Colleges are cultures and each is different." Stavis said the job was an "opportunity to broaden Dartmouth's role in relation to its many constituencies." Adams said that the News Service has a "tremendous staff, and I am not bashful about saying so." Although Adams believes he successfully handled his job as acting news director, he said "we are all looking forward to Laurel coming here and achieving new heights." Gilbert previously told The Dartmouth the office formerly known as the College News Service changed its name to the Office of Public Affairs "to reflect the responsibilities of the office that deals with not just the media, but also with public affairs and communication issues." Stavis is the ninth head of the operation, but the first after its renaming.
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop told members of the Class of 2000 last night health care reform in the immediate future could lead to either a successful merger of the best aspects of previous health care systems or lead to a system that will collapse in 30 to 35 years. In a speech titled "Will Your Parents' Medical Bills Threaten Your Financial Security?" delivered to about 115 freshmen in Spaulding Auditorium, Koop described the evolution of health care since the start of the Clinton Administration and the possible outcomes of health care systems in the future. "If things were bad when Clinton came on board, they have gotten no better and in many instances they have gotten worse," Koop said. America in the near future could see a system based on greed with soaring health care costs, a merging of the best aspects of managed care and fee-for-service health care.
Dartmouth held on to its seventh-place rank for the second year in a row in U.S. News & World Report magazine's annual survey of national universities. The rankings appeared in the magazine's "America's Best Colleges" issue, which came out earlier this month.
College rankings have become even more prevalent this year as anxious high school students continue to create a market for them.
Dr. Samuel Thier, president and CEO of Massachusetts General Hospital and CEO of Partners HealthCare System, Inc. in Boston, will be the keynote speaker at this morning's convocation exercises. In addition to welcoming the Class of 2000, Thier's convocation address will kick off Dartmouth Medical School's year-long bicentennial celebration. "Dr. Thier has earned the profound respect of all segments of medicine," said Dr. Andrew Wallace, dean of Dartmouth Medical School, in a statement released by DMS.
Welcome first-year students! I must say right away that this is the column I have been dreaming of writing since I was but a wee first-year lo those many years ago.
Two incidents mar sophomore summer
I once had an engaging discussion with a friend on the movie "The Rock." Although, I am sure some of the Dartmouth readership are familiar with the movie, allow me, for those who have not seen it, to outline the portion of its plot pertinent to this column. In the movie, a U.S.
To the Editor: I was disturbed to read your recent article "Language Programs in Decline," [July 31] describing students' declining interest in studying abroad in Dartmouth language programs.
The best word to describe the Dartmouth men's and women's cross country teams for the past few years is dominant.
Rusted Root, an up-and-coming alternative band, will bring its sound to the stage at Leede Arena on Oct.
While the Admissions office has trumpeted the academic accomplishments of this year's freshman class, the Class of 2000 also boasts a range of non-academic talents and experiences from students who have spent time in a Bosnian concentration camp to Olympic torchbearers. Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg said throughout the admissions process, he was "struck by [the class's] talents outside of academics." "Since the beginning of school, people have said the class is focused and energetic.