Panel debates Kosovo strategy
Four Dartmouth professors addressed the idea of "Bombing for Peace" in the Kosovo conflict yesterday and discussed possible strategies for the upcoming months.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
10 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Four Dartmouth professors addressed the idea of "Bombing for Peace" in the Kosovo conflict yesterday and discussed possible strategies for the upcoming months.
For the millions linked by the World Wide Web, navigating the Internet is more complicated than the point and click of a mouse.
Although President-elect James Wright will have to wait until his new office in Parkhurst Hall has been repainted and rewired to move in, he is already balancing a hectic presidential schedule.
Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka denounced African dictatorships and linked past atrocities to current problems in Africa at the opening of an international conference last Thursday.
Lightning struck Russell-Sage Hall at about 4:20 p.m. on Monday, sending one student to the hospital and damaging the chimney and roof of the building.
John G. Kemeny, 13th president of the College -- the man who oversaw coeducation and helped invent the BASIC computing language -- will be honored by a new math building, the Board of Trustees announced yesterday.
Taran Lent '96, vice president of the Hanover Green Card, is leading the Green Card's overhaul of the DASH office.
Madeline Kunin, U.S. ambassador to Switzerland and former governor of Vermont, kicked off this year's Summer Symposium -- "Understanding New England" -- last night, with a speech which surprisingly focused on the effect of the Holocaust on U.S.-Switzerland relations.
Mathematics Lecturer John Finn has filed a lawsuit against several parties in Vermont last month in conjunction with the charges filed against him in 1994, which accused him of growing marijuana.
In November 1989 the Board of Trustees decided to divest from South Africa, because of apartheid. In 1993 the Board withdrew its investments from Hydro Quebec, a company which allegedly exploited Native Americans and damaged the environment.