New program sorts through College trash
After years of planning and some initial delays, the College has initiated an effort to separate its garbage into usable compost and actual trash.
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After years of planning and some initial delays, the College has initiated an effort to separate its garbage into usable compost and actual trash.
Homecoming at the College, traditionally a time for freshmen to come together as a class and celebrate, means many different things to freshmen.
Today marks the beginning of this year's National Coming Out Week at the College, a week of speeches, entertainment and activities to educate and unite the campus.
Members of the Class of 1933 faced the Great Depression and conflicts abroad while at the College, but they remember their years as students at Dartmouth fondly. About 29 members of the class returned to Hanover this weekend to celebrate their 65th reunion.
Senior Associate Dean Dan Nelson '75 loves the outdoors, as shown by the stuffed moosehead and portraits of the first men to climb Mount Everest on his office walls.
The Council on Student Organizations proposed a restrictive set of guidelines for College-funded student publications at a COSO meeting yesterday with student editors, but the committee will not decide on any policy changes for several weeks.
College President James Freedman spoke candidly about what he called his lifelong "journey through cancer" to an audience of 120 local residents at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center last night.
Kate Knight '01 has one problem with the College: "There is so much to do here that I can't do -- it's frustrating!"
Although Sophomore Summer is technically a requirement for all College students, some members of the Class of 1999 have left Hanover behind this term to pursue a variety of special internships, vacations or jobs.
With the advancement of information technology and increased use of the World Wide Web, computer companies are wary of college students using the Web as a platform to distribute software illegally.
Dartmouth offers a variety of options for those interested in continuing or exploring various facets of spirituality and religious life in college. Within the College and the surrounding towns, students can find a place to worship, meet others and become involved in the community.
Tubestock isn't the only way to beat the heat this weekend.
Every summer, the small white information booth on the Green offers assistance to confused tourists, gullible prospectives and misdirected laboratory rats.
As much as you know about Dartmouth, student tour guides from the Admissions Office might be able to teach you a thing or two. And you might think you could teach them a thing or two, as well.
All Dartmouth students work to balance classes with other activities, but these five seniors -- Paige Kambas, Jesse Kearney, Cristina Kuechmann, Caleb Scott and Sariya Sharp -- stand out as jugglers of many interesting, and at times unusual, committments.
It was a little more than three years ago when the College's two coed undergraduate societies were formed -- and while Panarchy's membership remains steady, Amarna may soon face problems as membership rises.
As construction of the Roth Center for Jewish Life winds down, the building of the Moore Psychology building is just getting started.
It is Green Key Weekend and that means it is time to venture off-campus for some fine dining in Hanover.
Beginning this fall, the College plans to offer a new exchange program with Oxford University's Keble College which will allow College students to study economics and government for course credits in their major.
After several days of searching, divers announced on Saturday that they have ruled out a pond near the Dartmouth Skiway as the location of the remains of the Lear Jet missing since Christmas Eve.