Tuck '81 remembered for his animated stories
(Editor's Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles profiling the Dartmouth victims of the Sept. 11 tragedy.)
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(Editor's Note: This is the fourth in a series of articles profiling the Dartmouth victims of the Sept. 11 tragedy.)
Tonight, in what is known as the "freshmen sweep," '05s from all corners of the campus will swarm the blazing Green. There, they will run circles around the bonfire, thus continuing a tradition that dates back to 1904.
New York City firefighters are known for their closeness to one another; they bond through a common love of their work and the five boroughs they are trusted to protect. They are called a brotherhood.
NEW YORK -- The Dartmouth community joined the rest of the United States today in mourning yesterday's horrific terrorist attacks against New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon. While students on campus monitored developments through TV news outlets, some Dartmouth community members in New York were experiencing the horror from an uncomfortably close vantage.
The trial of Robert Tulloch, the older of the two Vermont teenagers charged with the brutal stabbing deaths of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop, will be postponed until March 11.
In what was a final bid to extend its lifeline, Zeta Psi fraternity lost an appeal to overturn the College's permanent derecognition of the organization. The fraternity will no longer exist on campus.
Tens of millions of dollars have flown from the coffers of Congress to the hands of Dartmouth researchers since last October, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education.
After over a month of consultations with colleagues, experts and friends, President George W. Bush reached a decision regarding the federal financing of embryonic stem cell research: he supports it, but on his terms.
Boy meets girl. Boy and girl engage in some sort of nebulous intimate activity. Boy and girl never speak again.
The House of Representatives dealt a striking blow to proponents of human cloning on Tuesday. By a bipartisan vote of 265 to 162, the House voted to ban practices that involve the genetic replication of human embryos.
A high-ranking aide to Rep. Gary Condit, D-Calif., yesterday denied a report that he strongly cautioned a woman against disclosing an alleged affair between herself and the congressman to law enforcement officials.
In a move sure to incite ire in environmentalists across the nation, the House Resources Committee voted Tuesday to strike down a Democratic amendment banning oil drilling in the Arctic wildlife refuge.
Despite recent criticism from the American Civil Liberties Union and several media sources, the College stands firm on its position that it violated neither the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution nor the spirit of the law -- which guarantees the right of free speech -- in its derecognition of Zeta Psi fraternity.
The investigation into the disappearance of Chandra Levy, a 24 year-old former Washington intern, continued yesterday as police began an extensive search of abandoned buildings in Northwest Washington near the apartments of Levy and Congressman Gary Condit, D-CA.
Last week's passage of the Senate's version of The Patient's Bill of Rights -- a resolution long-debated in both houses -- was hailed as a victory for the Democrats. Celebration was short-lived however, as on Tuesday President Bush announced that he would veto the Democrat-backed legislation, having thrown his support instead to a Republican-favored bill expected to arrive on the House floor in mid-July.
The future of Zeta Psi fraternity will remain in question until mid-July, when the College will make its final decision on the organization's derecognition appeal, according to Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman.
The restructuring of the Senate entered a near-final phase last week, as both Democrats and Republicans agreed that the majority party will gain a one-seat advantage on all Senate committees and that the size of committees could be expanded to accommodate the change.
Today, over 1,000 young men and women will have one thing in common: long black robes. No matter their names, their majors, their interests, their backgrounds, their dreams and their passions, each will don traditional commencement attire.
In an attempt to overturn the College's recent decision to derecognize Zeta Psi fraternity, the organization is expected to file an appeal today, according to Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman.
In an announcement that made many a Democrat crow and many a Republican cringe, Vermont Senator Jim Jeffords announced his decision to defect from the GOP, citing irreconcilable differences between his own ideology and that of the current Republican party.