Students give DASH card mixed reviews
After one term of the new DASH card system, student reaction remains mixed but the College said it has no plans to change the system.
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.
44 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
After one term of the new DASH card system, student reaction remains mixed but the College said it has no plans to change the system.
Thayer Dining Hall "barely passed" a state health inspection last week, according to Sanitarian Gary Quackenbush from the N.H. Division of Public Health Services Bureau of Food Division.
Since its inception in 1769, the College's Board of Trustees has encountered many issues that have defined its role and demonstrated the ways in which it has tried to act in the College's best interests.
Nearly half the students at the College have now reported symptoms of the virus that causes upper respiratory problems and an itchy rash.
Through its incarnations as a tavern and multiple hotels, the Hanover Inn has been a landmark for members of the Dartmouth community for more than 200 years.
Dean of the Faculty James Wright delivered his annual address to the faculty of the arts and sciences yesterday afternoon, describing Dartmouth's place among institutions of American higher education and the benefits of the Will to Excel capital campaign.
Yuri Kochiyama, a community activist and former member of Malcolm X's Organization of Afro-American Unity, emphatically told her audience that racism still exists in America in her speech on Saturday morning.
David Orr, senior associate director of Alumni Relations, awarded club-of-the-year status to the Dartmouth Clubs of Indiana, Long Island, Rochester and Washington at the annual Dartmouth Club Officers' weekend, which was held at the College this weekend.
Stretching across the country and varying in size from 6,700 to 50 people, alumni clubs keep the Dartmouth spirit alive.
During each big College weekend, a green light shines down on the Green from the heights of Baker tower. This weekend many freshmen will see the light for the first time and wonder what it is.
The College has planned several activities to commemorate the 25th anniversary of coeducation at the College and to encourage the Dartmouth community to reflect on changes at the College over the past 25 years.
The Conservative Union at Dartmouth passed a resolution Monday night to back the Indian as the College's mascot in the name of tradition.
Seniors who haven't made arrangements for their relatives visiting Hanover on Commencement weekend better get cracking or they will find themselves with a couple extra roommates on hand for the occasion.
In an effort to find Dartmouth a mascot, a group of students unveiled a web survey today to garner community opinion on the topic.
Cailin Nelson '97 discovered a wire stretched across a mountain bicycle path near Sachem Pond on Saturday morning, which poses a potential hazard to mountain bicycle riders.
The Dartmouth community will have an opportunity to explore environmental issues in depth when Joseph Sax, a consultant to the Department of the Interior, and George Woodwell '50, founder and director of the Woods Hole Research Center in Massachusetts, visit the College this term as Montgomery Fellows.
A local man is facing a felony charge after allegedly stealing one bicycle and attempting to steal another at the College earlier this month.
After more than two years of controversy, the new Roth Center of Jewish Life at Dartmouth is finally under construction.
Four years in close quarters leads most Dartmouth graduates to have certain common personality traits.
A non-matriculating member of the Class of 1999, who allegedly tried to kill his father last summer because his parents refused to pay for his higher education, is pending trial in Maryland.