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The first day of their 47-month journey at West Point begins for the new cadets in the Class of 2016 during Reception Day, July 2. Roughly 1,150 new cadets were instructed on everything from company mottos, regimental greetings, how to salute and how to march. New cadets will then complete six weeks of Cadet Basic Training, learning how to be a West Point cadet and an introduction to basic soldiering skills. They will participate in rigorous physical training, small-unit tactical training, and rifle marksmanship, as well as learning to respond quickly and accurately to their commanders under conditions of mental and physical stress. At the end of this initial training period, new cadets will be formally accepted into the Corps of Cadets. Photo by Mike Strasser/USMA PAO
New cadets will learn to render a salute correctly during Reception Day July 2 for the Class of 2016. Afterward they will report to the cadet in the red sash as they are welcomed into their new Cadet Basic Training company. Photo by Mike Strasser/USMA PAO
11:15AM, Tuesday, May 10th, 2016
That's a wrap! Fitting final lines on my alarm's radio this morning: "Time keeps on slipping, slipping, slipping into the future..." 🎓
Fresh Hernando Kroger construction photos are coming up later this afternoon!
Hernando High School // 805 Dilworth Lane, Hernando, MS 38632
(c) 2016 Retail Retell
These places are public so these photos are too, but just as I tell where they came from, I'd appreciate if you'd say who :)
Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III congratulates Cadet 1st Class Amy Silverbush at the U.S. Air Force Academy’s Class of 2016 graduation ceremony at Falcon Stadium in Colorado Springs, Colo., June 2, 2016. More than 800 cadets graduated to become the newest second lieutenants in the Air Force. (U.S. Air Force photo/Mike Kaplan)
Today was a 2 photo day.
Caroline had set up a an area with props for photos. Meredith and her friends had a lot of fun with it.
Hometown: Burlingame, Calif.
Major: Engineering sciences, with a minor in human-centered design
Sophie Sheeline decided to try engineering the week before beginning at Dartmouth, a choice that became the foundation of her next four years. An interest in for global health and development led to working in Rwanda on small-scale hydropower sites with Dartmouth Humanitarian Engineering, as a Woman In Science Project intern in Dartmouth’s mHealth Lab, and as a developer and project manager in the DALI Lab. Sheeline began exploring the intersection of architecture and engineering as a platform for improving people’s quality of life. She seeks to inspire empathy and awareness, and enable the disabled. Her projects include a necklace questioning heteronormativity, music-based architecture for nursing home residents with dementia, and a system to enable people with paralysis to use the restroom independently. She is a member of Dartmouth women’s club soccer and Sigma Delta. Next year, Sheeline will return to Dartmouth for two terms for her bachelor‘s of engineering.
Favorite place on campus: the Black Family Visual Arts Center
“I go to the VAC to think. This place is where all my interests clicked. I can be so focused here that time disappears. I also love the collaborative studio culture and have learned so much from peers here.”
(Photo by Eli Burakian '00)
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So proud of my friend, Boris! Congratulations on graduating from CEU!
“I feel lucky to have had the opportunity to wear a blue gown last year when I graduated with a bachelor’s degree from the American University of Bosnia and now wearing a black one graduating with master’s...
Hometown: Atlanta, Ga.
Major: Linguistics modified with neuroscience
Anna Grace Gabianelli’s most meaningful Dartmouth experiences are associated with First-Year Trips, from hiking Franconia Ridge as a trippee to co-directing the program as a senior. The Outing Club and Trips exemplify the kind of experiential learning and strong community that Gabianelli values most about Dartmouth. She was involved with the program every year, including as a Trip Leader in 2013, a Lodj Croo member in 2014, and a Lodj Croo Captain in 2015. On an off-term last summer, she worked as an assistant student director for Summer Enrichment at Dartmouth (SEAD), a college access program for high school students. Gabianelli says she is endlessly grateful for Dartmouth's emphasis on student-run programs and for the responsibilities she’s been entrusted with. Gabianelli also worked as a campus tour guide since freshman year. She plans to remain in Hanover until September, organizing First-Year Trips for the class of 2020.
Favorite place on campus: Moosilauke Ravine Lodge
“Most of my involvement with the DOC has brought me to the lodge in one way or another, and I like to believe that its setting in the mountains has the ability to bring out the best in people. It has been the place where I have made some of my strongest relationships, worked the hardest, and grown the most over the last four years.”
(Photo by Eli Burakian '00)
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Hometown: New York City
Degree: PhD, ecology and evolutionary biology
Julia Bradley-Cook has long been captivated by extreme environments and the way humans interact with them. At Dartmouth, she researched permafrost soils in Greenland to understand climate change impacts on the large carbon pool that the soils contain. Julia was a National Science Foundation IGERT Polar Environmental Change Fellow and a GK-12 Fellow, and pursued science communication through blogging, video, and teaching. As a student leader, she served as president of the Graduate Student Council and co-founded the Science Technology and Engineering Policy Society. Bradley-Cook grew up in New York City and, at age 17, spent 40 days canoeing in the Canadian Arctic. After earning a BA in biology from Grinnell College, she spent two years working at a Namibian nongovernmental organization, supporting research in the Namib Desert and investigating energy use and carbon offset markets. After graduation, Bradley-Cook will return to Washington, D.C., where she is an AAAS Congressional Science Fellow.
Favorite place on campus: The Robert Frost statue
“Only a short walk from the Fairchild science cluster, Robert’s shaded perch never failed to clear my head and give me a fresh perspective.”
(Photo by Joe Martinez)
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Most students entering college for the first time this fall were born in 1991
Enjoy the list, pretty amazing!
Hometown: Charlotte, N.C.
Major: Neuroscience with minors in Spanish and anthropology of global health
At Dartmouth, Kelly Bach combined interests in science, athletics and mentoring. She conducted neurophysiology research as a presidential scholar, spent a term in Barcelona, and interned with the Reproductive Health Access Project while volunteering in the emergency room at Lutheran Medical Center in Brooklyn. After two years playing varsity soccer, injury forced her retirement. Captaining the triathlon team, racing with the Ivy League champion cycling team, and hiking the “Fifty” filled the athletic void. Her most meaningful activities involved counseling peers while co-director of the Pre-Health Mentor Corps, as a “Vox Crooling” and First Year Trip leader, and as a sister in Kappa Delta Epsilon. Embracing the local community, she worked at Pierce’s Inn and as an EMT with Upper Valley Ambulance and coached soccer at Hanover High School. Following graduation, Bach will work in clinical research at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
Favorite place on campus: Adirondack chairs overlooking the Connecticut River
“I feel a strong connection to both the Dartmouth and Upper Valley communities and have had incredible adventures exploring the beautiful areas that surround our campus. This little plot of grass, trees, and serenity right across the river has been the perfect place for me to slow down and recharge during my four amazing college years.”
(Photo by Eli Burakian '00)
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