Cataldo arrested for criminal trespassing
The Hanover Police arrested Peter Cataldo '00 early Saturday morning for trespassing on College property, Captain Chris O'Connor confirmed yesterday.
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.
41 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The Hanover Police arrested Peter Cataldo '00 early Saturday morning for trespassing on College property, Captain Chris O'Connor confirmed yesterday.
Although no charges have been filed by the Hanover Police in the incident involving an anti-Semitic threat written on the door of a Topliff undergraduate advisor, Safety and Security evicted Topliff resident Peter Cataldo '00 from his first-floor single Wednesday evening.
The Hanover Police and Safety and Security are investigating a string of anti-Semitic slurs repeatedly discovered on a student's door in Topliff residence hall over the past two weeks.
Dartmouth's Amos Tuck School of Business Administration and Vermont Law School will begin offering an exchange program for graduate students seeking either masters of business administration or masters of studies in environmental law degrees.
Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist, presidential scholar and one of this term's Montgomery fellows David Maraniss almost missed his big break into journalism -- all because of a hot dog stand.
In an unorthodox contest featuring events such as the 25-yard freestyle and the 800-yard individual medley, both the Dartmouth men's and women's swimming teams fell to perennial power Princeton on Sunday at Karl Michael Pool, after the men had suffered a loss to Columbia Saturday.
The announcement of Dart-mouth's new dean of the College could come as soon as next week, according to Search Committee Chair and Dean of the Faculty Ed Berger.
On a balmy August morning of 1996, Colby College graduate Frank Favaloro was preparing for one of those days that marks a turning point in any student's life.
Despite rugby's status as one of the most violent and dangerous sports offered at Dartmouth College, the women's rugby team -- as well as other club sports -- is ill-equipped to deal with serious injuries during a competition.
More than 600 iMac Apple computers are expected to arrive today -- a week after Apple's promised delivery date, according to Associate Director of Consulting for Computing Services Randy Spydell.
Two top administrators have responded to a Student Assembly report on excessive fines with promises to inquire about the nature of the fines and to change the system.
Three members of the Class of 2000 will run for Class Council president for the upcoming school year, while only one will campaign for the position of vice president, according to summer Council President Paul Holzer '00.
Visiting professor of anthropology Robert Welsch will return to Papua New Guinea on Sept. 7 to assess the progress of several small, coastal committees in the wake of a tsunami which has claimed the lives of at least 2,100 people.
Summer Carnival will kick off this Saturday at 1:00 p.m., and according to 2000 Class Council President Paul Holzer '00, it will be the Summer Carnival by which all others are to be judged.
A drain pipe crashed through the ceiling of Westside Buffet last Tuesday during peak dinner hours, narrowly missing several campers as debris and tiles fell to the floor.
As preliminary construction on Berry Library continues this week, the sound of pounding jackhammers have prompted the Baker Library information desk to offer earplugs to all patrons.
In the era of Dartmouth founder Eleazar Wheelock, religion took the form of a required daily worship for students.
Summer term's Montgomery fellow and famed African-American scholar Dr. Manning Marable called for Americans to change their definition of racism and the methods used to combat prejudice, in a speech to a crowd of more than 150 people yesterday afternoon in the Rockefeller Center.
If sophomore summer is supposed to be a quiet and relaxing three months, then student leader Jaimie Paul '00 is going about it all the wrong way.
The number of both locked and unlocked bikes reported stolen increased last term, especially towards the end of the school-year, according to Safety and Security Crime Prevention Specialist Rebel Roberts.