NPR broadcaster discusses China
Mary Kay Magistad, the woman behind the voice that so many Americans have heard from China via National Public Radio for several years, spoke yesterday in the Rockefeller Center.
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Mary Kay Magistad, the woman behind the voice that so many Americans have heard from China via National Public Radio for several years, spoke yesterday in the Rockefeller Center.
In keeping with the theme for this years carnival, "Lest the Cold Traditions Fail, Carnival Through the Years..." the Winter Carnival Committee created a ski jump and skier on the Green, reminiscent of the fomer ski jump competitions held annually on the College's golf course.
Director of the Whitney Museum of Art and Dartmouth graduate, Maxwell Anderson '77 now vies for a position on the College's Board of Trustees and thinks his non-profit background would help round out the group.
"Marriage is a great institution, but who wants to live in an institution?" asked Susan Apel of the Vermont Law School, quoting actress Mae West.
Seven Dartmouth students will fly to the Marshall Islands this winter to teach in the local public schools through an internship program sponsored by the education department.
"Rebecca Lee, if you don't change directions, you're going to end up where you're heading," Rebecca Adamson said her mother told her.
Members of coeducational fraternities and undergraduate societies seem equally upset by the reforms mandated in the Trustees' recent social and residential life initiative -- although the reforms would include formation of more coed houses similar to their own.
"The College encourages individuals with disabilities to apply for admission with the expectation that the College will provide access to all programs."
More than 65 students from universities across the Northeast came to enjoy the winter weather this past weekend for the Dartmouth Hillel's third annual Ski Shabbaton at Killington, VT.
Through a video and descriptions of personal experience, Melissa Birch brought the conflict between the Mexican government and the indigenous Zapatista people to the attention of an audience of approximately 40 students and faculty in Hinman Forum last night.
Zeta Beta Chi sorority is announcing today that it will dissolve on Dec. 10, and all its assets will be donated to charity.
Seven Tibetan monks worked for three days building a sand mandala on the floor of Rollins Chapel this week, only to destroy the sculpture on Sunday while a crowd of over 400 community members and students watched.
While the wind blew through unfinished windows, 15 people crept under heavy black tarps to glimpse the interior of the College's future.
Tonight at 8 p.m. Spaulding Auditorium will vibrate with music transformed by travel over centuries, across the globe, through antiquated instruments and through the fingers of four amazing musicians.
Students hurrying to meet the fall course selection deadline can now speed up the process by accessing course listings on the World Wide Web.
Stuart Simms '72, the secretary of Maryland's department of public safety and correctional services, received the Nelson A. Rockefeller Distinguished Public Service Award on Friday.
A recently completed insurance investigation reported that an outbreak of shigella at the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center this fall was not deliberate.
About 500 extra students wandered around campus last week, comparing admissions-brochure pictures to the realities of breakfast in Collis Cafe and an 8:45 a.m. class in Dartmouth Hall.
Six great jazz artists will play tribute to their mentor, Art Blakey, at the Hopkins Center stage this evening.
The Hanover Conservation Council, the town's oldest and largest conservation organization, held a panel discussion and forum for public questions and commentary last night at the Howe Library.