The Dartmouth Review The Dartmouth Review The Dartmouth Review 25th Anniversary Gala

 

Monday, September 09, 2002

Elsewhere

Wall Street Journal:
For the second straight year, Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business was ranked ahead of Harvard, Yale and Columbia Universities. Recruiters gave the Hanover, NH, program high marks for producing graduates who excel in such areas as communication, teamwork and strategic thinking. Ranking behind Dartmouth is the University of Michigan (no.2), Carnegie Mellon University (no.3), Northwestern University's Kellogg School (no.4) and University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School (no.5).

Also: WSJ/Harris PR

Austin Statesman:
Dartmouth College was third [in a survey of universities that have profited from tech research] with $68.4 million, most of that from sales of stock in biotech company Medarex, which had given Dartmouth equity in re- turn for patent licenses.

AP: Tuck's Paul Argenti on Schwab's recent television campaign:
If you look at how people are looking at business, it's probably not a good time to be trying to build your reputation and credibility in the financial services sector.

Mercury News:
During frigid winter mornings as a Dartmouth student, Teevens ['79] delivered newspapers at 5 a.m., had hockey practice at 6 and was in class at 9. At Stanford, his day begins at 6:30 a.m. and ends at 11 p.m., after he has returned every phone call and responded to every e-mail. He sleeps just enough to justify the cost of a pillow.
...
Teevens climbed the coaching ladder with the speed of a four-minute miler. He spent four seasons (1981-84) as offensive coordinator at Boston University, then led Maine to its first back-to-back winning seasons in 21 years. In '87, Athletic Director Ted Leland lured Teevens back to Dartmouth, and Teevens produced two Ivy League titles in four years.

Also: SF Chronicle, SJ Mercury (again), Boston Globe


Dartobserver:
Finally, in what way is Jeffrey Hart "rancourous and ridiculous"? Smiling through the Cultural Catastrophe, despite its title, contains almost no polemics against multiculturalism. It is a learned and passionate defense of the Great Books, and is more well-written than The Western Canon. As for his articles in the Review, well, I think they're very good. Just because you disagree with them doesn't mean that they're "rancourous and ridiculous," yes?

Nemours Foundation: DMS's Paul B. Batalden, MD, wins the 2002 Alfred I. duPont Award for Excellence in Children's Health Care.

The Sun-Sentinel:
"Once people really begin to think about what invading Iraq is about, they are going to come to the conclusion this is not what America does. To me this is tremendously heartening," [says Dartmouth's Ron Edsforth].

Posted by Andrew Grossman at 3:43 PM

Comments

Post a Comment (we enforce our comments policy)