Intro Pages to Bacon

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Intro Pages to Bacon Dartmouth Class of !"#$ Reunion Book Comittee Walter Tsui, Chair Liz Babb Fanlo Marion Halliday Kendall B. Wilson Printed in Canada Designed by Joyce Weston Letter from the Class President On behalf of the ’!" class o# cers, the executive committee, the DCF team, our reunion book team, and our $%th Reunion team, I am honored to wel- come you back to Hanover whether you are physically back on campus or you are brought back through the memories and stories in the pages ahead. &'!", in the world of technology alone, was a break through year. Plans to construct the “channel tunnel” are announced, the Space Shuttle Chal- lenger explodes following launch, the Soviet Union launches the Mir space station, IBM unveils the ( rst laptop computer (the “PC Convertible”), Brit- ish surgeons perform the world’s ( rst triple transplant (heart, lung, and liver), Internet Mail Access Protocol is de( ned allowing for email trans- fer, the )!" Series microprocessor is introduced by Intel, and the Human Genome Project is launched, or so I am told on the World Wide Web (whatever that is). As I write this, a mere $% years later, President Obama is chastising the Egyptian government for violating human rights by shutting down Internet access due to an uprising organized in large part through social media. * e world has most de( nitely changed. At Dartmouth, the “new dorms” that were being designed while we were in school are now the old dorms, with a number of recently built resi- dential clusters having taken over as the hot places to live. New teaching buildings, social areas, athletic facilities, and major upgrades to * ayer and Tuck are impressive and obvious from even a quick walk around campus. Majors, o+ -campus programs in places, and research projects focused on issues we could never have imagined shape the Dartmouth experience of so many undergrads. Tuition has certainly increased. * e shops and restaurants that now crowd still small Hanover Center present a feel, if not a functionality, that is a long way from cashing checks in a bank that was literally in a trailer or from thinking that variety was choosing the potato skin special at % Olde Nugget Alley. Dartmouth has most de( nitely changed. As you read through the pages that follow, you will certainly notice that we have changed as well. You may even ( nd some signi( cant surprises. Wow, he’s a lot cuter than he was in college. Boy, she never said a word, and now she is in politics. I most remember seeing him in the basement on Saturday nights, and now he is a CEO? I recall she was always surrounded by a large group of friends, and now she lives in an isolated village in Africa working for a relief organization! I hope that most of these changes—these surprises—are good ones… ones that cause us to not just remember why we loved Dartmouth, but also perhaps cause us to see some of the things that felt challenging about Dartmouth back in ’!$–’!" in a new and di+ er- ent light. Dartmouth Class of ’86 3 * is said, I think you will also ( nd some comfort in how much is the same for us. * e pages that follow depict a group of people of varying back- grounds, interests, careers, types of families, adventures taken, and chal- lenges encountered. * ey depict smart and talented people doing creative things that impact their community, their country, and o, en the larger world around us. * ey depict people who enjoy, engage, and shape life. I dare say, they depict the kind of graduates—even if we might have played a little harder and worked a little less hard than the students of Dartmouth today—that President Kim seeks to produce today, “leaders who can tackle the world’s most di# cult problems”. I hope you thoroughly enjoy wandering through the pages ahead. I hope each brings back wonderful memories, reconnects us with old friends, and inspires us to reach out and make some new ones. I hope it also rallies us as a class. Given the joys and very real challenges we face in $-&& and the years ahead, I hope we as a community can take the best of those values and motivations that have remained the same for us and the most exciting capabilities and aspirations that have changed for us and parlay them into a future set of memories, stories and world changing accomplishments aptly recorded and duly celebrated in the yearbook we ( nd ourselves reading in the Summer of ’)". Je+ Weiss ’!" Class President 4 Dartmouth Class of ’86 An Enduring Institution In $--., on the occasion of its '-th anniversary, the leading strategy and technology consulting ( rm Booz Allen Hamilton identi( ed what it consid- ered the world’s “enduring institutions,” a group of &- institutions that have “changed and grown in unswerving pursuit of success and relevance — yet remained true through time to its founding principles.” Dartmouth, along with Oxford University in England, were named in the academic institu- tions category. Traditions, memories, institutions, rituals… yes, all of those endure, and all describe our days attending, and years since graduating from, dear old Dartmouth. We continue to stand as brother stands by sister, lest the old traditions fail, but as graduates of a liberal arts college, we know that room must be given for new themes, new buildings, new habits. Here in no particular order, and certainly not meant to be exhaustive, is a survey of some of the latest and greatest at the Green! Buildings and Grounds: • * e Hanover Inn will be adding &$,--- square feet to it’s footprint in a /&$ million project to get underway in $-&&. • Campion’s has closed. Serry’s Clothiers and Tailors closed in $--. a, er '0 years. Churchs Childrens Clothes, in business for more than %- years, shut its doors in $--%, followed in $--0 by the Hanover Camera Shop, a ( xture for 0- years. * e block once dominated by Campion’s is now home to * e Gap, among other stores. Across the street, Barnes & Noble took over the management of the Dartmouth Bookstore. • * e "'-room hotel at Six South Street in Hanover opened in $-&&. • Sig-Ep’s new renovated house will be open for inhabitants spring $-&& accompanied by some architectural controversy among the students. • * ayer Dining Hall has been renamed the Class of &'%) Commons. • * e historic Main Hall of Baker-Berry Library now houses sofas and comfy chairs, and soon, a new co+ ee bar. Remember when it housed card catalogs? • Debuting in $---, Scully-Fahey Field is now home of Dartmouth Men’s and Women’s Lacrosse, measuring !",.-- square feet, it features specta- tor seating, fencing, a press box and a scoreboard. • Following a /' million contribution from an anonymous donor, the sec- ond 1 oor of Alumni Gym is now called the Zimmerman Fitness Center. • * e Class of &'!. led a group of ( ve architect classmates in designing the new Class of ’!. Crew Cabin at Moosilauke. * e new cabin is right next to the Ravine Lodge itself. • * e College had to convert doubles in the Fahey-McLane residential clus- ter to triples in order to accommodate the increased size of the Class of $-&.. Dartmouth Class of ’86 5 • Zeta Psi has a beautiful new house on Webster, completed in $-&-. • * e Floren Varsity House debuted January $--!. Attached to the renovated East Stands of Memorial Field, the structure features a &-,----square foot strength training center; &)--seat “smart classroom”; meeting rooms and study lounges for all varsity teams; football locker facilities; and the list goes on. • * e Burnham Soccer Field went up in $--' years as did Biondi Park—the new baseball stadium at Red Rolfe Field. • Kiewit was torn down in $--- and all computing functions moved to the new Berry library. • * e “Shower Tower” buildings are gone: Bradley Hall was torn down in $--"-$--0 with its sister building, Gerry Hall, to make room for the Hal- deman Center, Kemeny Hall and Carson Hall buildings. • In &''!, Webster Hall was converted into the Rauner Special Collec- tions Library, which includes Dartmouth archives and a majestic climate controlled glass tower that houses a collection of vintage books, letters and manuscripts. All are available for Dartmouth Alumni to view and explore. Weird but true: • Student volunteers on the Winter Carnival snow sculpture get two physi- cal education class credits for their work. • Google supplemented its car-based street view coverage of Hanover and Lebanon by sending in a tricycle-mounted camera. • To the dismay of many students of the College, use of BlitzMail will end in $-&&, in favor of a Microso, suite of email/online collaboration pro- grams. It is likely that the new e-mail program will still be referred to as Blitz. • In $-&-, the Hop displayed an exhibit of “pong” art featuring several beautifully painted pong tables and paddles from various fraternities, sororities and co-ed societies. Selected Commencement speakers: • &'!": Stephen Warren Bosworth ’"&, U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines; • &''%: William Je+ erson Clinton, President of the United States; • &''0: Paavo Lipponen ’"., Prime Minister of Finland; • $--$: Fred McFeely Rogers ’%-, creator and host, Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. • In $--$, a student reported a shelf of books on the seventh 1 oor of Baker library disappeared practically before his eyes, soon starting a ra, of ghost stories at the college. • * e ski jump was removed from the Winter Carnival schedule when the sport was dropped by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. 6 Dartmouth Class of ’86 • Citing competition costs and lack of interest, the ski jump was torn down in &''). • * e Hanover Green is wireless. • Green Key Weekend is “Hums”-less. * e singing tradition eventually ended in the late &'!-’s.
Recommended publications
  • D a R T M O U
    A B C D E F G H I J Occom Corey Ford Rugby House, S Pond 1 Dartmouth Child Care Center, 9 To Hanover Country Club te a N t 1 J Lot To Rivercrest, CRREL, Storrs Pond, rs 9 d & e R t te Montgomery In a y Organic Farm, McLane Family Lodge, t rr Dartmouth Outing ClubG H Lotuse rs House e te F Dartmouth Skiway In e p H Lot o 1 R 1 Grounds Labor Building 11 Rope Ferry Rd 6 Rope Class of 1978 Ferry Rd 37 Dewey Field Vail Life Sciences Center Dewey Lot Dick's House Road Dana Biomedical Infirmary Library C le m F Lot Rd en e t 5 Rope Ferry Remsen m Rd Ly 1 Rope Ferry Road Kellogg Geisel School Road Medical Auditorium of Medicine 3 Rope Ferry Former Roth Center For Road Dana Biomedical 0 2 te 1 2 r Jewish Life Library Rou e Maynard Lot Delta LALACS v Gilman Life Ave i and Delta 13 Choate Rd ighl R M Thomas Hall Sciences Lab H Aquinas House Delta ay n N C a D t h r V o d a P u Catholic Student Center Cohen Hall te S e R t r d Goldstein Hall a 'Bissco' Sherman House o r c n i Rauner Hall k Chinese Language a Commons t S ay arkw A 'Brittle' House Moore Psychology t P c Byrne II v McLaughlin e Commons Brown Hall Native American Building e Bissell Hall Hall Cluster R Epsilon St n North Hall House Bildner Hall o iew u v Kappa Fair n Winifred-Raven Gillman t Little Hall t e Alpha Choate House Alpha Theta S o Theta 1 Cutter Shabazz Hall House e 2 Chi Sigma g Berry Hall e 0 C Ledyard ll Alpha Phi Kappa o C A Canoe rr Delta Webster Parker e Epsilon Club T Cottage Tom Dent r Epsilon Chi Phi Tau House Dragon te Phi s Gamma Gamma Sudikoff Cabin b Delta e Epsilon
    [Show full text]
  • 2010 BIG GREEN MEDIA GUIDE the 2010 BIG GREEN
    Senior Captain Robert Young Baseball America Preseason All-Ivy 2010 BIG GREEN MEDIA GUIDE The 2010 BIG GREEN Front Row (l-r): Chad Piersma, Zack Bellenger, Kyle Hunter, Ennis Coble, Spencer Venegas, Matt Peterson, Chris O’Dowd, Michael Johnson. Middle row (l-r): Ezra Josephson, Jim Wren, Robert Young, Jake Pruner, Jeff Onstott, Joe Sclafani, Kyle Hendricks, Ryan Smith, Max Langford. Back row (l-r): Assistant Coach Nicholas Enriquez, Assistant Coach Jonathan Anderson, Jason Brooks, David Turnbull, Brett Gardner, Brandon Parks, Dan Ternowchek, Colin Britton, Ben Murray, Cole Sulser, Jake Carlson, Marco Mariscal, Head Coach Bob Whalen. Sophomore Sophomore Junior Junior Kyle Hendricks Joe Sclafani Jeff Onstott Ryan Smith Baseball America Baseball America Baseball America Baseball America Preseason Ivy Pitcher of the Year Preseason Ivy Player of the Year Preseason All-Ivy Preseason All-Ivy Contents/QuiCk FaCts InformatIon 1-2 QuIck facts Table of Contents, Quick Facts . 1 Location . Hanover, N .H . Media Information . 2 Founded/Enrollment . 1769/4,200 Nickname . Big Green Colors . Green and White Conference . Ivy League President . Dr . Jim Yong Kim Acting Athletics Director . .Robert Ceplikas Home Field . Red Rolfe Field at Biondi Park (1,300) the opponents 37-42 Dimensions . LF - 325, CF - 403, RF - 340 Press Box . .603-646-6937 Akron, Bethune-Cookman, Boston College, Bradley, Brown, Bucknell . 38 Head Coach . Bob Whalen (Maine ’79) Columbia, Cornell, Hartford, the Dartmouth Record at Dartmouth (Years) . 376-395-1 (20) Harvard, Holy Cross, Illinois . 39 Overall Record (Years) . 376-395-1 (20) experIence 3-12 Long Island, Northwestern, Ohio State,, Office Phone . .603-646-2477 Dartmouth College .
    [Show full text]
  • APRIL 2011 Newsletter DARTMOUTH COLLEGE CLASS of 1981
    APRIL 2011 newsLetteR DARTMOUTH COLLEGE CLASS OF 1981 Newsletter Editors: Peter Oudheusden • [email protected] • Robert Goldbloom • [email protected] Bill Burgess Elected Trustee Voting for this year’s Alumni Trustee position took place from March 9th through April 6th. REVEL•REFLECT•RECONNECT As Bill was running unopposed - it came as no surprise that he won in a landslide. He will join our other trustee-classmate, Annette Gordon-Reed, who took her seat in February. DARTMOUTH CLASS OF 1981 If you haven’t met Bill, here is a nice write-up the College supplied for interested J u n e 1 6 - 1 9, 2 0 1 1 • Hanover, New Hampshir e alums: “At Dartmouth, Bill was respected Our 30th Reunion is just two months away. It’s time to make sure you are registered, your for leading with inclusivity, enthusiasm reunion housing is booked, your travel plans have been made, and you’ve contacted all of and dedication. He was president of Alpha your friends - this is a great long weekend filled with events, food and catching Delta fraternity, served as president of the up. You don’t want to miss it! Check out our free reunion dedicated smart Interfraternity Council was a member of phone app (found on the class website - www.alum.dartmouth.org/classes/81). Sphinx senior society, Green Key and of It gives you instant access to: registration, housing, weekend schedule, who’s the rugby, football and lacrosse teams. Bill attending (updated daily), a countdown till important weekend events, hotel earned his MBA degree at Harvard and links, local up-to-the-minute weather, a reunion map with the key locations for has nearly three decades of experience in our events, webcams to see the College and the area, and a Dartmouth College corporate finance and venture capital.
    [Show full text]
  • The Transmission the Dartmouth Class of 1968 Newsletter Fall 2014
    TheThe Dartmouth Dartmouth Class Class of of 1968 1968 The Transmission The Dartmouth Class of 1968 Newsletter Fall 2014 Class Officers Editor’s Note President: Peter M. Fahey 225 Middle Neck Rd Port Washington, NY 11050 (516) 883-8584, [email protected] There is much exciting news to celebrate from the College this fall. We have just Vice President: John Isaacson beaten Penn, Yale, and Holy Cross in football! It’s nice to pick up the Boston Globe 81 Washington Avenue and read something positive about the College for a change. Having just attended Cambridge, MA 02140 (617) 262-6500 X1827, Class Officers Weekend in early September, there is much support for and excite- [email protected] ment about Moving Dartmouth Forward and the Presidential Steering Committee Secretary: David B. Peck, Jr. will continue to gather input through the fall. As your Newsletter Editor and class- 54 Spooner St. Plymouth, MA 02360 mate, I am encouraged to see this real effort go forward to combat the three ex- (508) 746-5894, [email protected] treme behaviors of sexual assault, high-risk drinking, and exclusivity. President Treasurer: D. James Lawrie, M.D. Hanlon and Dartmouth are national leaders in working to solve these serious prob- 1458 Popinjay Drive Reno, NV 89509 lems that affect most colleges and universities. Unfortunately, Dartmouth has (775) 826 -2241 [email protected] been singled out in the past for these issues and the bad publicity has discouraged students from applying and some from attending once accepted. 50th Reunion Gift: William P.
    [Show full text]
  • Phi Beta Kappa Number
    Phi Beta Kappa Number ~ DECEMRER, 1918 I 3 --/ Sigtna Kappa Triangle VOL. XIII DECEMBER, 1918 NO. 1 ... , ~' • 'Ev KTJP p.ta ooo~.. OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY PHI BETA KAPPA NUMBER GEORGE BANTA, Official Printer and Publisher 450 to 454 Ahnaip St., Menasha, Wlsconein. TRIANGLE DIRECTORY Editor-in-chief MRS. FRANCIS MARSHALL WIGMORE c!o The Orland Register, Orland, Cal. Chapter Editor FRITZI NEUMANN 701 A St. S. E., Washington, D. C. Alumnm Editor FLORENCE SARGENT CARLL South China, Maine . Exchange Editor MABEL GERTRUDE MATTOON 127 N. Malabar St., Huntington Park, Cal. Contributing Editor GRACE COBURN SMITH 2137 Bancroft St., Washington, D. C. Circulation Manager HATTIE MAY BAKER 24 Sunset Road, West Somerville, Mass. All communications r egarding subscriptions should be sent direct to Miss Baker. SIGMA KAPPA TRIANGLE is issued m December, March, June, and September. All chapters, active and alumnre, must send all manuscript to their respective editors (at the addresses given above) on or before the Fifteenth of October, J anuary, April, and July. Price $1.25 per annum. Single copies 35 cents. Entered as second-cia s matter October 15, 1910, at the postoffice at Menasha, Wis., under the act of March 3, 1879. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided f or in section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917, authorized, .July 31, 1918. SIGMA KAPPA SORORITY Founded at Colby College in 1874 FOUNDERS MRS. L. D. CARVER, nee Mary Caffrey Lowe, 26 Gurney St., Cam­ bridge, Mass. ELIZABETH GORHAM HOAG (deceased). MRS. J. B. PIERCE, nee Ida M. Fuller, 201 Linwood Blvd., Kansas City, Mo.
    [Show full text]
  • 26/21/5 Alumni Association Alumni Archives National Fraternity Publications
    26/21/5 Alumni Association Alumni Archives National Fraternity Publications ACACIA Acacia Fraternity: The Third Quarter Century (1981) Acacia Sings (1958) First Half Century (1954) Pythagoras: Pledge Manual (1940, 1964, 1967, 1971) Success Through Habit, Long Range Planning Program (1984-1985) ** The Acacia Fraternity. Pythagoras: A Manual for the Pledges of Acacia. Fulton, Missouri: Ovid Bell Press, 1940. The Acacia Fraternity. Pythagoras: A Manual for the Pledges of Acacia. Fulton, Missouri: Ovid Bell Press, 1945. The Acacia Fraternity. Pythagoras: A Manual for the Pledges of Acacia. Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin: Howe Printing Company, 1948. The Acacia Fraternity. Pythagoras: Pledge Manual of the Acacia Fraternity. Nashville, Tennessee: Benson Printing Company, 1964 The Acacia Fraternity. Pythagoras: Pledge Manual of the Acacia Fraternity. Nashville, Tennessee: Benson Printing Company, 1967. 9th edition(?). No author. Pythagoras: Membership Manual of the Acacia Fraternity. Boulder, Colorado: Acacia Fraternity National Headquarters, 1971(?). 10th edition. Ed. Snapp, R. Earl. Acacia Sings. Evanston, Illinois: Acacia Fraternity, 1958. Goode, Delmer. Acacia Fraternity: The Third Quarter Century. No Location: Acacia Fraternity, 1981. Dye, William S. Acacia Fraternity: The First Half Century. Nashville, Tennessee: Benson Printing Company, 1954. No Author. Success Through Habits: The Long-Range Planning Program of Acacia Fraternity, 1984-85. Kansas City, MO: National Council Summer Meeting, 1984. 26/21/5 2 AAG Association of Women in Architecture
    [Show full text]
  • 55Th Biennial Convention Elects New Council
    Fall, 1984 Vol. 101, No. 3 Mollie Fitzgerald, an undergraduate member of ~B - Duke, is welcoming faU with her newly released book The On Campus Cookbook. 55th Biennial Convention Elects New Council praised the combined attention of active and alumnae mem­ bers to the membership selection process and proposed a personnal challenge in stating, "The awareness of the danger of alcohol abuse and an understanding that Kappa has a respon­ sibility to help their members make sound choices about their use of alcohol continues to be one of the greatest challenges." (Over 80 chapters had some kind of alcohol related program during the past biennium.) She mentioned that we are in the era of "It's Great to be Greek" and many members are partici­ pating in Panhellenic. In the last 20 years more than a million new members have joined NPC member groups. Kappas continue to uphold philanthropic endeavors with a total of $380,000 awarded to scholarships during the bienni­ um. "Every single one of us can buy a Kappa magazine sub­ scription through the Rose McGill Agency housed at Fraterni­ ty Headquarters," said President Nitschke as she viewed the spirit of Kappa is giving to others. New resources unveiled at convention included: Revised Ad­ ventures in Leadership, A Guide to Scholarship, Manual for Pledge Chairmen, Songs of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Revised Book of Devotions, Keys to Housing, Graphics Manual, and the Kappa Kappa Gamma Professional Directory. An inspirational Memorial Service paid tribute to all Kappas who passed away during the biennium; a stirring President's Dinner featured seven former presidents with Helen Snyder Steiner speaking as the ranking president- her 27th Fraternity convention; a KappaFair unparalleled where resource people were available to answer any and all questions; a cookout at Mummy Mountain with skit; "Kids on the Block" came to the philanthropy dinner; and an encounter with " Sun Signs and Marian Klingbeil Williams, 0 - Missouri Fraternity President Spirit Circles" at the candlelight banquet are all moments to be remembered.
    [Show full text]
  • Read Doc # Dartmouth College Undergraduate
    OQJW9GDIFLEV « Doc > Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: Alpha Theta (coeducational Fraternity), Alpha Chi Alpha,... Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: A lph a Th eta (coeducational Fraternity), A lph a Ch i A lph a, Kappa Kappa Kappa, Dartmouth College Greek Organizations, Ph i Tau, Ch i Heorot, Sigma Delt Filesize: 9.39 MB Reviews Comprehensive guide for pdf lovers. It generally is not going to charge too much. You may like just how the article writer write this book. (Neva Hammes MD) DISCLAIMER | DMCA 8S7RW7LBKQV0 « Kindle Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: Alpha Theta (coeducational Fraternity), Alpha Chi Alpha,... DARTMOUTH COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATE SOCIETIES, INCLUDING: ALPHA THETA (COEDUCATIONAL FRATERNITY), ALPHA CHI ALPHA, KAPPA KAPPA KAPPA, DARTMOUTH COLLEGE GREEK ORGANIZATIONS, PHI TAU, CHI HEOROT, SIGMA DELT Hephaestus Books, 2016. Paperback. Book Condition: New. PRINT ON DEMAND Book; New; Publication Year 2016; Not Signed; Fast Shipping from the UK. No. book. Read Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: Alpha Theta (coeducational Fraternity), Alpha Chi Alpha, Kappa Kappa Kappa, Dartmouth College Greek Organizations, Phi Tau, Chi Heorot, Sigma Delt Online Download PDF Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: Alpha Theta (coeducational Fraternity), Alpha Chi Alpha, Kappa Kappa Kappa, Dartmouth College Greek Organizations, Phi Tau, Chi Heorot, Sigma Delt MFERSB0TUKXN « eBook > Dartmouth College Undergraduate Societies, including: Alpha Theta (coeducational Fraternity), Alpha Chi Alpha,... See Also Kit and Dog: Set 03 Pearson Education Limited. Paperback. Book Condition: new. BRAND NEW, Kit and Dog: Set 03, Jeanne Willis, This title is part of Phonics Bug - the first Phonics programme to bring together research-based teaching methods with... Read Document » Pop! Pop! Pop!: Set 03: Alphablocks Pearson Education Limited.
    [Show full text]
  • Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity Sourcebook, 2013-2014 This Sourcebook Is the Property Of
    Alpha Chi Sigma Sourcebook A Repository of Fraternity Knowledge for Reference and Education Academic Year 2013-2014 Edition 1 l Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity Sourcebook, 2013-2014 This Sourcebook is the property of: ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Full Name Chapter Name ___________________________________________________ Pledge Class ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Date of Pledge Ceremony Date of Initiation ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Master Alchemist Vice Master Alchemist ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Master of Ceremonies Reporter ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Recorder Treasurer ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ Alumni Secretary Other Officer Members of My Pledge Class ©2013 Alpha Chi Sigma Fraternity 6296 Rucker Road, Suite B | Indianapolis, IN 46220 | (800) ALCHEMY | [email protected] | www.alphachisigma.org Click on the blue underlined terms to link to supplemental content. A printed version of the Sourcebook is available from the National Office. This document may be copied and distributed freely for not-for-profit purposes, in print or electronically, provided it is not edited or altered in any
    [Show full text]
  • Gabi Cooper's Testimony Here
    Senator Saviello, Representative Tucker, and members of the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, my name is Gabrielle Cooper, I am a resident of Pittston, and a senior at Gardiner Area High School. I am testifying today in support of LD 894, An Act To Increase Funding for the Youth Conservation Corps. I worked for Midcoast Conservancy’s Youth Conservation Corps last summer in the Damariscotta Lake area. I was looking for a job that was unique as well as educational, and YCC afforded me that exact opportunity. I enjoyed 2 months of incredibly rewarding work fashioning rubber razors and infiltration stairs, as well as maintaining various trails. The homeowners that I met were very welcoming, and their dedication to the environment was inspiring. I returned home after each day of work with the realization that I had done something to better my community and had a new story to share with my parents. While I remain undecided on what major I’d like to pursue in college and what I’d like to do for an eventual career, my YCC experience was instrumental in the planning of my future. I will be attending Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire next year, and I wrote one of my essays about the skills and confidence that working for the YCC program gave me. I am absolutely certain that this essay was an integral part of being accepted to my dream school. Additionally, the time I spent outside, enjoying the natural beauty of the Damariscotta Lake area, made me realize that I want to join Dartmouth’s Outing Club and take part in hiking, skiing, and biking trips during my time in college.
    [Show full text]
  • Dartmouth's Community Impact
    Dartmouth’s Community Impact September 2018 Introduction: Dartmouth College educates the most promising students and prepares them for a lifetime of learning and of responsible leadership, through a faculty dedicated to teaching and the creation of knowledge. In fulfilling its mission as an educational institution, Dartmouth strives to serve its students as well as the Upper Valley community through its role as an employer, collaborator, and innovator. This report illustrates the symbiotic relationship between Dartmouth, Hanover, and the Upper Valley in areas including economic impact, research and innovation, education, arts and culture, sustainability and conservation. Economic impact: Dartmouth has a substantial financial impact on the local, regional, and state economies of New Hampshire and Vermont. Taxes & Fees: Dartmouth pays taxes on all dormitories, dining rooms, and kitchens with values in excess of $150K, as well as about 500 off-campus rental properties and commercial properties (approximately 53% of its Hanover property holdings). Dartmouth is Hanover’s largest taxpayer, contributing roughly 20% of the taxes in support of the county, town, and school budgets. Employment: Dartmouth is New Hampshire’s ninth largest service sector employer with 3,497 resident employees (Dartmouth Hitchcock is the largest employer with 9,100 employees)1. In FY17 Dartmouth paid $464M in payroll and employee benefits. Dartmouth is also a large local spender. According to an analysis of purchasing data, Dartmouth spent about $146M in New Hampshire and Vermont in FY172. Dartmouth’s economic impact extends beyond its direct actions as a local spender and employer. Dartmouth’s 4,300 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students make up a significant portion of Hanover’s total population and, as residents and consumers, play a critical role in the local economy.
    [Show full text]
  • Outing Club Number
    Bates College SCARAB The aB tes Student Archives and Special Collections 2-14-1929 The aB tes Student - volume 56 number 34 - February 14, 1929 Bates College Follow this and additional works at: http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student Recommended Citation Bates College, "The aB tes Student - volume 56 number 34 - February 14, 1929" (1929). The Bates Student. 392. http://scarab.bates.edu/bates_student/392 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives and Special Collections at SCARAB. It has been accepted for inclusion in The aB tes Student by an authorized administrator of SCARAB. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 133 OUTING CLUB NUMBER VOL. I.VI. No. 34. LEWISTON. MAINE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1929 PRICE TEN CENTS BATES COLLET OUTING CLUB PROGRAM Thursday, 3.30 P. M. Friday. 3.30 P. M. Saturday, 10.00 A. M. SNOWSHOE DASH, Women OBSTACLE SKATE. Men Maine Inter-Collegiate Winter Sports Meet SKATE DASH. Women SNOWSHOE DASH, Men SKI X-COUNTRV SKATE DASH, Men SNOWSHOE X-C( )UNTRV POTATO SNOWSHOE DASH. Women < HSSTACLE SKATE. Men POTATO SNOWSHOE DASH. Men SKATE DASH. Men SNOWSHOE DASH ONE MILE SKATE Men SKI PROFICIENCY SKI DASH, Women (.'LASS RELAY, Women SKI JUMP SKI DASH, Men CLASS RELAY, Men Evening 7.30 3.30 P. M. SKI SLIDE, Women ICE CARNIVAL (Hand) M. 1. T. vs. HATES. HOCKEY GAME SNOWSHOE OBSTACLE Men GRAND MARCH BURLESQUE HOCK EY GAME Evening 8.00 SNOWSHOE OBSTACLE, Women GENERAL SKATING CARNIVAL HOP (Informal) \WC PAGE TWO THE BATES STUDENT, THURSDAY, FEB. 14, 1929 THE BATES STUDENT Member of New England Intercollegiate Newspaper Association.
    [Show full text]