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The Dartmouth
May 23, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Ann Debord
The Setonian
News

Haig to compete in Miss Black USA

Nadine Haig '97 will represent New Hampshire at the Miss Black USA pageant in Washington, D.C., tomorrow. Haig says she is excited about the national contest because it will give her the opportunity to meet women like herself from across the nation and to be "a role model for other young ladies." A 20-year-old from Brooklyn, N.Y., Haig won first prize in the Miss Black New Hampshire pageant in November, giving her the right to continue on to the Miss Black USA pageant. Haig said she entered the New Hampshire pageant, which she learned about on an Afro-American Society bulletin board, because "it would be something fun and interesting, something to tell my kids about." So far there have been no requirements of her state title, Haig said. The national contest, which is based on academic achievement as well as physical beauty, will be aired on the cable network Black Entertainment Television later this year, she said. The competition consists of four segments: personal expression, talent, evening gown and a personal interview. At the televised pageant, Haig will perform a monologue for the talent portion of the show, she said. Haig said she has been working with English Department Chair Bill Cook to find an African-American monologue that is "really dramatic, strong and cultural." Haig said she spent her winter break preparing for the national competition.

The Setonian
News

Alumni reminisce about past at games

As Abner Oakes '56 watched the Big Green football team crush Colgate University on Saturday, he probably thought of his grandfather, Charles Oakes, a member of the Class of 1883. More than 100 years before the Dartmouth football team squashed Colgate 35-14, Charles Oakes scored the only touchdown in the College's first-ever football game, an 1881 meeting against Amherst College. Abner Oakes, a third-generation Dartmouth alumnus, was just one of many graduates who returned to the College for Homecoming this weekend to reminisce and pay homage to their alma mater. Most alumni at the football game said they came to the game because, as Roger Phillips '52 said, they "love Dartmouth football." This love is what Phillips said draws him from his home in Connecticut to watch the Homecoming game at Memorial Field ever year. Though his two sons, members of the Classes of 1979 and 1980, keep the College on his mind, Phillips' strongest link to Dartmouth remains football games.

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