Saturday, April 14, 2007

More On Gargiulo

Former defensive end standout Anthony Gargiulo '06 is wisely hedging his bet. Although he's hoping the Montreal Alouettes will eventually budge from their offer of a two-year contract and give him a one year deal with an option for the second (see Big Green Alert premium story) he's not standing pat. He now has a workout scheduled in a couple of weeks with the CFL's Calgary Stampeders. Of note: Calgary has just two defensive ends listed on its roster.

Speaking of the 6-foot-3, 254-pound Gargiulo, check out what this web site has to say about him:
Despite adding over 10% to his weight, his measurables and quickness are still unreal. I personally witnessed him running a 3-cone at 6.48 seconds, which is scary quick.
and this ...
I liken him to a Javon (sic) Kearse type player who can put his hand down or stand up and play like a linebacker in coverage, able to run with TEs or RBs stride for stride. Another current player comparison – again, this is potential – would be Jason Taylor. Yes, Garguilo has that kind of athleticism.
Some of the numbers quoted on the site: 4.58 in the 40; 37.5 vertical; 30 reps at 225 pounds; 10-foot standing broad jump; 3.96 short shuttle and as fast as 6.42 in the three-cone.

Two things of note about Anthony:
  • For someone who has been out of school for a year he's young. He began school early. If he'd started when other kids born in late October started, he would be just graduating this spring. And if he'd gone to a scholarship school, he'd likely have redshirted and would be playing his redshirt college season in the coming fall.
  • A former Dartmouth coach told me about a circle drill he used to have the players run. He said in all the years he'd been coaching, he'd never seen what happened when Anthony's feet started moving. The coach told me the grass turf actually ripped as me made his cuts around the circle. The coach said he couldn't believe what he was seeing but that's how quick Anthony cut and it happened all the time.
Green Alert Take: Hyperbole (and misspelling) aside, Gargiulo is an intriguing prospect. While any of the numbers might be off a tick (including his weight), the overall picture they paint is hard to ignore. He was a dominant force in the Ivy League who was considered a potential draft pick a year ago. The knock on him is that he's probably not big enough to be an NFL defensive end and doesn't have experience at outside linebacker. He's been working hard at getting his shot since the summer and the feeling here is that if someone takes a chance on him they won't be disappointed.

From today's story in the New York Post about the New York Giants looking at quarterback Anthony Wright as a possible veteran backup to Eli Manning: "Wright, 31, is arguably the last proven quarterback remaining on the market." I'd love to have been a fly on the wall when Jay Fiedler saw that comment.

Cornell coach Jim Knowles after the first day of spring ball as quoted in the Ithaca Journal: "... (W)e have to grow that passing attack. Going on 12-13 play drives is great, but it is so easy to make a mistake. You need to have some quick strikes.”

And finally, a clarification. Harvard Sports Information Director Chuck Sullivan is one of the good ones in the business, not afraid to answer the hard question when called upon. Unfortunately, Chuck's comment about Tommy Amaker's salary and how it would be received among his new Harvard coaching colleagues this week was misunderstood by the school paper. What Sullivan was trying to convey, he shared with me in an email, was was why the school doesn't "disclose salary numbers for any coach. It wasn't given as an explanation of Amaker's contract, primarily because I know exactly one detail of his deal -- that it is a multi-year contract."

Sorry, one more thing. The weather forecast is calling for 3-5 MORE inches of snow tomorrow. ARGH!!!

Friday, April 13, 2007

Gargiulo Weighing Offer North Of Border

D-End Has Successful Tryout With CFL Team

HANOVER -- O Canada.

There are no guarantees -- in pro sports there rarely if ever are -- but when the Montreal Alouettes visit the Toronto Argonauts in an exhibition game on June 9 there could be former Dartmouth teammates on opposite sidelines.

It was back on February 8 that defensive tackle Derham Cato '05 signed with the Argonauts.

Now, thanks to a late-February tryout in Albany, N.Y., two-time, All-Ivy League defensive end Anthony Gargiulo '06 is weighing an offer from the Alouettes. He expects to make a decision regarding the Canadian Football League team within the next 10 days or so.

To read the full story, visit the premium Green Alert site.



NOTE: Spring football coverage will begin Monday, pending the start of spring ball. A brief synopsis will appear here after most practices but the full stories will be available only on the premium site. Because subscriptions won't open until late July/early August, non-subscribers who would like to have access to the site during the spring should email me via the link at the right.

James Jones Lands At Kentucky State

James Jones, a Dartmouth assistant two years ago under Buddy Teevens, is joining the staff at Kentucky State after one year at Kansas State according to this note in the Capital-Journal. Jones will coach the defensive line for the Division II Thorobreds in Frankfort. ...

The NCAA is rolling back several of the rules that shortened college football games last fall. From a story on ESPN.com:
On Thursday, the rules oversight panel approved two major timing changes that would revert the rules to what they were in 2005 -- stopping the clock on possession changes and not starting it on kickoffs until the receiving team touches the ball.
Cornell has brought cycling's yellow jersey to the football field. Read about it in the Sun.

Yale is posting the audio play-by-play of last November's win over Harvard in The Game on iTunes for a free download. According to the Yale Daily, the school is looking at more ways to marry podcasting with athletics.

College Sporting News has a nice story about former quarterback Jim Gregory -- "Grambling's White Tiger" -- returning to Louisiana to mourn former coach Eddie Robinson. It's a particularly timely story given the anniversary of Jackie Robinson joining the Brooklyn Dodgers. Eddie Robinson, like Jackie Robinson, was a pioneer, deciding to bring in the first white player ever to play at one of the historically black colleges. From the story:
In the late 1960s, Robinson had decided he was ready to integrate Grambling at a time when most mainstream, southern universities had never fielded a black player on any of their rosters.
It's not about football, but this New York Times story about a switch-throwing pitcher at Creighton University is too good to miss. Harvard had a switch-throwing pitcher several years ago as well.

Still on baseball, this weekend's Dartmouth doubleheaders against Brown have been moved to Providence thanks in no small part to 6-8 inches of snow in these parts yesterday. That means the entire home Ivy League slate this "spring" will consist of a doubleheader against Harvard on April 28. Add it up and Dartmouth will play two out of its 20 Ivy League games on Red Rolfe Field. If Tuesday's game against Vermont can't be played -- and the snow on the field combined with a dicey forecast makes it highly unlikely -- the first 32 games of the season will be played somewhere other than on Red Rolfe.

If the UVM game is postponed and not made up, Dartmouth's home season will consist of three games: The Harvard twinbill and a subsequent single game with Hartford.

Barring a change, spring football is slated to start Monday at 5 p.m., on Memorial Field. Here are the "highlights" of the upcoming forecast:

Sunday: Rain and snow showers
Monday: Snow and wind
Tuesday: Rain and snow showers
Wednesday: Few showers
Thursday: Few showers
Friday: Showers

Bring your umbrella!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

2007 Big Green Outlook Up

The 2007 Big Green football outlook has been posted on the Dartmouth football website. One of the more interesting bits in the story is how they might be handling the running back slots, "almost morphing the tailback and fullback positions." ... There's a lot of interesting stuff here, but little or no mention of the freshmen because the college can't officially comment on the regular-decision recruits and it wouldn't be wise to talk about some of the class (early decision) and not about others.

One place the freshmen could come into play is at the quarterback position where the returnees (including 2005 starter Josh Cohen) will be joined by a pair of well-regarded recruits: 6-5 Will Deevy of Colorado's Kent Denver School and 6-1 Tim McManus of St. Thomas Academy in Minnesota. A friend of the family let me get a peek at video of Deevy and while highlight films are always tricky to parse, he's clearly a talented quarterback (and a pretty good basketball player as well). I haven't seen McManus, but someone I spoke to in Minnesota who knows Dartmouth football and has seen him play on a number of occasions raves about his ability to make things happen with his legs and his arm. Expect both to jump into a wide-open quarterback derby with two feet.

Cornell coach Jim Knowles is the A in a Q&A about the Big Red centered around spring ball. Find it here.

Former Michigan coach Tommy Amaker made it official yesterday, confirming he will be the next head basketball coach at Harvard. The Boston Globe, the Harvard Crimson and the Daily Pennsylvanian all have stories. Green Alert Take: No doubt, Harvard basketball and Ivy League basketball get a real PR bump out of the hiring. But I agree with those who say the Ivy League is a coach's league and Amaker will have to prove he can match up, which is no slam dunk. Ultimately, of course, it will come down to whether he can recruit and whether Harvard is willing to give him the help he needs. ... One thing is for certain: Harvard has at least given the appearance that it wants to win in a program that has been to the NCAA's just one time, in 1946. Check out what the Harvard SID told the Crimson newspaper regarding Amaker's contract:
"You'd have 31 head coaches running in for raises if numbers were disclosed."
For the record, the Boston Globe said it is believed to be a multi-year contract at $225,000 a year.

ESPN.com has a wonderful piece about San Diego Padres pitcher Chris Young -- the former Princeton baseball/basketball standout -- writing his senior thesis largely on Jackie Robinson. Young's thesis was titled, "The Integration of Professional Baseball and Racial Attitudes in America: A Study in Sterotype Change." Young tracked the correlation between Robinson and how race was portrayed in the New York Times over periods of time. I found his topic particularly interesting because I wrote my journalism Masters on Muhammad Ali, race and the Vietnam War, similarly using a handful of newspapers to track how perceptions of Ali changed as acceptance of the war changed.

William F. Buckley has written a column headlined, The High Cost of Loving Dartmouth centered around the trustee race and candidates Sandy Alderson and Stephen Smith.

That heavy snow forecast for this area started to fall at 7 a.m., and up here on the mountain it is coming down as hard as any snow we've had all year. The basketball hoop is still out in the driveway so the plow will have to work around it. It was a lot easier to move the pitchback back into the garage. The weather folks are now saying eight inches or more are expected. A month ago, a certain Hanover High freshman and her 7th grade brother would be dancing at the prospect of a storm like this but now that the bats and balls are out of winter storage, they are disappointed. The freshman, by the way, was elected to the high school council as well as to class committee on Monday, so kudos to her.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Heavy Snow Headed This Way

I just checked the weather forecast and thought it worth sharing. The italics are mine:
Tomorrow: Periods of snow and gusty winds. Some sleet may mix in. Temps nearly steady in the low to mid 30s. Winds ESE at 15 to 25 mph. Chance of snow 90%. Snow accumulating 10 to 15 inches.

Tomorrow night: Cloudy with rain and snow in the evening, light snow late. Low 29F. Winds NNE at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of precip 70%.
A few years ago Dartmouth baseball didn't play on Red Rolfe Field until its final regularly scheduled home game of the season. (To the credit of coach Bob Whalen and his squad, Dartmouth won the Red Rolfe Division that, uh, spring.)

Even before this impending storm the schedule was in disarray. A home doubleheader against Siena was canceled a week ago today. Last week's "home" doubleheaders against Cornell and Princeton were played at Princeton. The odds against this weekends doubleheaders against Brown being played at home are astronomical.

And should the predicted snows come, Tuesday's home game against Vermont would be in serious jeopardy, meaning there's a very good chance that the entire home schedule would consist of an April 28 doubleheader against Harvard and a May 1 game against Hartford.

As a baseball fan, I'm hugely disappointed. I can only imagine how tough it is on the team. That FieldTurf for Red Rolfe can't arrive soon enough. ...

And don't get me started about my Little League schedule ;-(

Windows Over Memorial Field

Windows are installed on the front of Floren Varsity House Tuesday. (Click photos to supersize)
A closer look at the installation.
Next door, meanwhile, the Dartmouth baseball team works snow off of the infield tarp. Today is supposed to be 45 degrees and sunny but anywhere from 2-10 inches of snow may fall overnight and tomorrow.



Gary Emanuel, a Dartmouth assistant under Buddy Teevens the first time around, has joined the coaching staff at San Jose State after serving as the San Francisco 49ers defensive line coach the past two years.

Jay Fiedler is listed in a group of nine quarterbacks in Scout.com's "Best Available Free Agents - Offense." ... Although Fiedler recently worked out for the Atlanta Falcons, the team signed Joey Harrington. He's rumored to be in line for a look by the New York Giants, but the team is expected to be talking with former Dallas Cowboy Anthony Wright as well according to the Newark Star-Ledger.

Missed this the first time but in the final round of cuts the Berlin Thunder of NFL Europe waived former Princeton secondary star Jay McCareins. ... Check out the Roar Lions Roar blog for "The Freshman" & the "Old Alum" Talk Spring Practice!

There's been no formal announcement out of Harvard yet -- perhaps today -- but the Crimson is expected to hire former Michigan coach Tommy Amaker to lead its basketball program. Amaker's interview energized the players according to this quote from guard Andrew Pusar in today's Harvard Crimson:
"When he was in that room, he got everyone motivated right away. Numerous people said if he was the coach, they would want to step out on the court and play for him from day one. I’m psyched about it, I know the team is psyched about it.”
And finally this -- Columbia is in line to receive a $400 million gift from "media mogul" John Kluge, a 1937 graduate who already gave the school $110 million between 1987 and 1993 according to a Wikipedia bio that lists his net worth at $11 billion. The headline from today's Columbia Spectator:

Kluge To Donate $400 Million

Alum's Donation Is Largest in University's History, Will Be Dedicated to Financial Aid

According to the Associated Press, the gift will be one of the largest ever made to American higher education. ... For frame of reference, Henry and Betty Rowan gave $100 million to Glassboro State College in 1992 and they named the school after them! It's now Rowan University. Perhaps the least Columbia could do is rename the athletic teams the Columbia Klugers. It's got a ring to it, don't you think?

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Teevens' REALLY Excellent Adventure


The states in color are those Dartmouth football coach Buddy Teevens plans to bicycle through during a cross country ride from San Diego to Hanover that will begin on May 7. The ride will be part alumni relations, part recruiting, part raising awareness of breast cancer and all adventure.

Dartmouth Coach Buddy Teevens Planning To Bicycle From San Diego To Hanover
To Meet Alumni And Coaches As Well As To Raise Breast Cancer Awareness


By Bruce Wood
Big Green Alert

HANOVER -- Whether it's pushing the building of a new varsity house from dream to reality in record time, planning a snowshoe outing for wide-eyed recruits from the deep south or promoting the idea that his players sit in the front row of their classes, the wheels are always turning for Dartmouth football coach Buddy Teevens.

They'll really be turning early next month when Teevens hops on his Serotta bicycle in San Diego and begins pedaling back to New Hampshire. Fit and trim at age 50, Teevens plans to cover more than 3,600 miles on his own two wheels, and he plans to do it in less than one month's time.

You read that right.

He will set off from California on the morning of May 7 -- two days after Dartmouth's spring football practice ends -- and intends to roll into New Hampshire in time to make son Buddy Jr.'s, graduation from Connecticut's Salisbury School in Connecticut on June 1.

By his count, Teevens will have to average about 160 miles per day riding through the desert, over mountains and through parts of at least 14 states to meet his timetable. He will be accompanied for at least the first portion of his trip by friend and former teammate David Shula '81.

"This is something I've always wanted to do," said Teevens, entering the third year of his second tenure at Dartmouth. "My sister Moira '87 did it years ago and loved it. It's been on my mind. I've gotten more into cycling as I've gotten older. It takes the stress off your knees and back. It's something I really enjoy."

While he's kept his plans relatively close to the vest so far, those who know what Teevens is up to have had mixed reactions.

"My wife's main concern is that I'm well-insured," he said with tongue firmly in cheek, where he proceeded to keep it for a time. "My staff has been very supportive and encouraging. It will get me out of the office. And the other people I've told have ranged from, 'Are you nuts?' to, 'I wish I could do that.' "

Teevens has shared his plans with only a few of his players so far.
"I'm sure some of them will look at me a little bit cockeyed when they hear about it, but I think it will be pretty well received," he said.

Teevens is no stranger to long-distance bicycling. Two years ago he pedaled from New Hampshire to a family vacation on Lake Michigan. "It was kind of on a whim and it was one of the most enjoyable things I've ever done," he said. "You are out there by yourself and you just go. You meet farmers or locals and they are curious. They wonder why you'd do something like this but they are tremendously supportive. It was refreshing to see how friendly people could be. They didn't know me from anyone. I was just Buddy on a Bike."

An inveterate multitasker, "Buddy on a Bike," has a number of objectives for his ride. He's hoping to meet, albeit briefly, with Dartmouth alumni along his route. He'd like to renew acquaintances with high school coaches he's come to know through recruiting across the country. And he's touched base with the Prouty Century Bike Ride & Challenge Walk, which raises money for cancer research at Dartmouth's Norris Cotton Cancer Center, about using the ride to help increase awareness of breast cancer, which has afflicted wife Kirsten's family. While he's not promoting his cross-country sprint as a fundraiser per se, he'd welcome contributions in honor of the ride being made to The Prouty.

Although it's been on his mind for a while, Teevens only recently realized he could squeeze the ride into the busy life of a Division I college football coach.

"I thought if I ever did this it would be well after I retired, if I could still walk," Teevens said with a laugh. "But the more I thought about it, the more I realized it could work. With the nature of recruiting at Dartmouth I do a lot of heavy traveling in December, January and February. The May period would historically be more meeting with alumni and lighter recruiting for me. My thought was to tie it all together this way and hit different pockets around the country. The timing is right with the weather, not too hot in the desert and not too cold once I get over the mountains.

"It's ambitious, certainly. I've got a small window; just about three weeks. But I think it's doable. People have done it in far less."

Teevens, the kind of person who never wants his 45-minute run to take more than half an hour, bicycled 225 miles in one day on his ride to Michigan a couple of years ago and covered at least 170 miles on each day of that trip.

"I know conditions and terrain will have an effect on how this goes," he said. "The unknown for me is the mountains. I've gone over ski mountains here and they are challenging, but it's different from the west. A lot of it will depend on luck. Hopefully you avoid flat tires and bicycle problems and get a tailwind instead of a headwind."

With welcomed expertise from the Claremont Cycling Depot in New Hampshire, Teevens plans to travel as light as possible, eschewing a sleeping bag and tent in favor of motels and quick overnight stops with interested alumni and acquaintances.

"I'll travel with a credit card," he said. "But I'm sure I'll get caught in a situation where there's 50 miles to the nearest hotel and how am I going to get there? Some people have been kind enough to offer a place to stay. With the pace we're trying to keep it would be just overnight, grab something to eat, get something in the morning and get back on the road."

Teevens' route will take him from California through Arizona, New Mexico, a little of the Texas panhandle, Oklahoma, Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont and eventually to New Hampshire.

"It's not etched in stone," he said. "We're trying to stay off major major roads. We're hoping alums along with way will either ride a segment or point me in the right direction, and that coaches or people I meet along the way will assist as I get a little closer to them."

Teevens opted to fly west and bicycle east to avoid a flight at the end of his ride, and to try to avoid something else.

"Headwinds," he said. "You hear that you have a better chance of getting tailwinds going east, but people I talk to who have done it say not to believe that stuff. It's going to blow all over the place and often. If you get lucky, you get lucky, but it's going to blow in your face a lot."

Teevens plans to share updates on his progress on the Green Alert Dartmouth football blog (whose author has crossed the country twice by bicycle). "We'll post stuff regularly," he said. "That way people along the way will be able to follow where we are. We'd love to have them ride along for a bit or share some travel advice."

Just don't look for Teevens to be wearing a flashy Dartmouth cycling shirt or streaming a banner off the back of his bike.

"I'm a little bit more plain," he said. "I'll have some Dartmouth gear to wear because it is a recruiting opportunity. But part of it is just creating curiosity about Dartmouth. Having people wondering, 'What is this guy doing and where is he from?' I'm sure I will meet a lot of interesting people along the way."

Editor's note: To contact Teevens about his trip, send an email to Buddy Bikes. To follow Teevens' trip, watch for regular updates on the Big Green Alert blog.




I don't usually begin with a non-football story, but the Boston Globe reports former Michigan and Seton Hall coach Tommy Amaker has been offered the Harvard basketball position and that's big news in the Ivy League. The Harvard Crimson also has a short story. ... It will be interesting to see if Amaker has any second thoughts about the job the first time he makes the bus ride from Columbia to Cornell on a snowy Friday night only to get in at 4 a.m. and have to play that night. And how he feels after he gets off the bus at 5 on Sunday morning after driving through the night from Ithaca. I could be wrong, but I just don't think they traveled like that at Michigan, or when he was playing at Duke.

James Perry, the former Brown quarterback who had a short stint on the staff at Dartmouth, is returning to his alma mater as an assistant coach according to the Providence Journal. Perry is the brother of former Dartmouth assistant John Perry, who joined the UNH staff this offseason.

Former Penn standout Jim Finn intends to fight for his job as New York Giants fullback according to the New York Post. Finn understands the deal:
"Hey, it's the NFL, every day they're trying to replace you," Finn said. "I've been basically trying to get shown the door since the day I got in the NFL."
It's 158 days until Dartmouth's opener if the widget on my Mac is correct, but hype for the 2007 season has begun with the release of the "watch list" for the Lott Trophy, given to college football’s "Defensive Impact Player of the Year."

The forecast is calling for two inches of wet snow Thursday. Barring a change in schedule, the Little League team I'm coaching may play its first game before its first practice. That certain Hanover High freshman had practice in the gym ending at 9:15 last night and again tonight. Her first game was slated for Friday and they've been outside for all of an hour and a half on the school's new turf football field, which is once again covered by snow. As for that certain Hanover 7th grader, his first baseball practice was slated for a week ago. He hasn't even met his coach yet.

And lest you think the Dartmouth football team is getting off easy, spring practice is scheduled to start Monday. Wanna guess what the weather forecaster is calling for Monday? Yup.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Monday Musings

Dartmouth spring football is slated to begin one week from today. ...

With the NFL draft on tap April 28-29, here's a look at the Ivy Leaguers taken since 2000:
  • 2006 Kevin Boothe (Cornell) OT , Oakland, 6th round
  • 2005 Ryan Fitzpatrick (Harvard) QB, St. Louis, 7th round
  • 2004 Nate Lawrie (Yale) TE, Tampa Bay, 6th round; Casey Cramer (Dartmouth) TE, Tampa Bay, 7th round
  • 2003 None
  • 2002 Jeff Hatch (Penn) OT, New York Giants, 3rd round
  • 2001 Than Merrill (Yale) S, Tampa Bay, 7th round; Eric Johnson (Yale) TE, San Franciso, 7th round
  • 2000 Isaiah Kacyvenski (Harvard) LB, Seattle, 4th round
There have been 130 I-AA (FCS) players chosen since 2000, an average of 18.6 per year. The high was 28 taken in 2000. The low was 14 in 2003. There were 16 chosen a year ago. For the complete list, follow this link.

The question tossed at New Hampshire wide receiver David Ball by an interviewer from nbcsports.com: "What were your emotions when you went to the NFL Combine and found yourself among players with much different resumes from yours?"

Ball's revealing answer:
To be honest, I felt like I was coming from a community college and I was going to a job interview with a bunch of guys from Ivy League schools.
Snow delayed the start of spring football at UNH according to this story. From what the story suggests, the graduation of Ball aside, the biggest questions for the Wildcats might be on the other side of the ball.

For pictures of Dartmouth players snowshoeing and skating during the winter, check out the Dartmouth Football Parents News & Notes. Click on the individual pictures to supersize them.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Action On Memorial Field


Memorial Field saw action yesterday as the Dartmouth women's rugby team took on the powerful Army squad. Forget about "between the hedges," this one was "between the snow banks." The grounds crew worked hard to clear the field Friday and it was ready to go Saturday.

This Patriots.com mock draft has New England taking Brown linebacker Zak DeOssie in the fourth round. ... I'd thought this ScrippsNews site had a note on Harvard tailback Clifton Dawson's NFL hopes but instead it calls UMass back Steve Baylark a possible darkhorse runner despite times in the 4.8's. Dawson's career is mentioned only as a benchmark for Baylark.

The Sporting News has a good story about the frustrations UNH receiver David Ball is feeling as the NFL draft approaches. Apparently the first 20 yards of his 40 time project to a 4.4 or better, but the second 40 is significantly slower and NFL scouts are holding it against him. A muscle pull has kept him from pushing any harder. Find the story here.

Pennsylvania high school junior David Posluszny, brother of Penn State linebacker Paul, has chosen Notre Dame. Why is that mentioned here? Check out what he had to say about his choice in this story:
"I really don't think there's another place where you can get an Ivy League education while competing for a national championship every year."

The story around the Ivy League for years has been that the floor at Dartmouth's Leede Arena was rock-hard and contributing to foot and leg injuries to basketball players. At long last, that troubling floor is being replaced, a process made more difficult because the subfloor apparently is concrete. Installation of a new state-of-the-art, suspended floor will be finished this summer.

The Berry Sports Center (home of Leede) was opened in 1987. For a little background on that facility and all "buildings and landscapes of Dartmouth College," check out this site that features "information on about 450 buildings, streets, and open spaces related to the College, all built between 1755 and the present." Everyone, and I mean everyone, can learn interesting facts about the college here.

By the way, if you are following the progress of the Floren Varsity House, this link to the specific page in the site above will prove interesting.

Best of luck finding those eggs ...