Who's who at Dartmouth
While freshman probably do not know many people at the College yet, there are administrators they should be familiar with.
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While freshman probably do not know many people at the College yet, there are administrators they should be familiar with.
In the pre-dawn hours of this morning, the circus came to town.
Lee Bollinger, who has been provost for a little more than a week now, is very much the new kid on the administrative block.
While many Dartmouth summer dwellers lay motionless beneath the sun in their free time, others must keep circling the Green in their training for marathon competition.
Hanover and other local towns have planned 4th of July activities to delight both the young and the young at heart.
Lee Bollinger arrives tomorrow to start his tenure as provost, making him the number two official in the College's executive office.
The Collis Center gameroom will be home to a fresh batch of video games on July 1, when a new contract with an amusement games vendor begins.
Forced indoors by rain, the College's 224th Commencement ceremonies featured speeches on the merits of the "Dartmouth experience" by Labor Secretary Robert Reich '68, College President James Freedman and valedictorian Kamala Dansinghani '94.
Friends and family of Daniel Boyer '94 took time to remember him this week.
After recovering from a near-fatal accident, Lisa Yaffe '93 can proudly claim the distinguished honor of graduating twice from Dartmouth as an undergraduate.
Hanover schoolchildren have taken to roaming the streets, haunting local businesses and commandeering the Howe Public Library because there is no place for them to hang out after school.
Dean of the College Lee Pelton founded a men's discussion group last fall for male administrators, faculty and students to discuss gender issues and work to reduce violence and sexual assault against women.
Non-traditional students, the College's designation for students matriculating at age 25 or older, have formed a group to help other atypical undergraduates make an easier transition to college life.
Being an accomplished outdoorsman or athlete is no longer the necessary qualification to lead a Dartmouth Outing Club trip. The DOC Trip directors are trying to recruit a more diverse pool of applicants to lead the wilderness adventures that begin most students' first-year experience.
Two women's teams that complained to the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights about gender inequity in Dartmouth athletics will gain full varsity status and receive full funding within the next 18 months, the College announced Tuesday.
Mrs. Ou's Restaurant, a new 110-seat Chinese restaurant on Main Street, opened Saturday for sit-down service and will begin carry-out and delivery Wednesday.
Hanover resident Nardi Campion and her dinner parties have almost become an institution in these parts, but she eschews the idea of herself as a member of high society.
Government Professor Tom Nichols will appear tonight on the television game show Jeopardy. The episodes, which were taped during Fall term, will air at 7:30 p.m. on WNNE, the local NBC affiliate. WNNE is channel 4 with cable and channel 31 without cable.
The heads of the four major governing bodies of the College's Greek System and a representative of the co-ed houses announced yesterday their intentions to form a committee to investigate the Greek system's role at the College.
In a report released earlier this month, a committee charged with examining diversity on campus found the Greek system to be detrimental to the College's academic mission and recommended an immediate and formal evaluation.