The More Things Change..
(Editor's Note: This piece is a work of speculative fiction about what Dartmouth may b like ten years from now.)
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(Editor's Note: This piece is a work of speculative fiction about what Dartmouth may b like ten years from now.)
If you're looking for a grand medieval adventure full of guts, glory and a heroic quest, "Excalibur" (shown yesterday in Spaulding Auditorium as part of the Dartmouth Film Series) is a must-see cult-classic.
For the fifth time in College history, not one but two Dartmouth faculty -- economics Professor Douglas Irwin and history Professor Bruce Nelson -- have been awarded prestigious fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation.
Just like last Homecoming, the football stadium will be lacking one of its "biggest" fans -- the moose.
Computing Services is getting ready to test a new piece of software that will change the printing procedure in the hopes of reducing waste.
One of Dartmouth's oldest student service organizations, Palaeopitus, is ready to start furthering their goals for this year, with their newest members.
The Office of Residential Life has its forces supplemented this year by eight full-time professional Community Directors, who oversee and guide the student staff of Undergraduate Advisors, Graduate Advisors and Program Liaisons to benefit and enrich the residential life experiences of students at Dartmouth.
President James Wright has officially appointed Associate Provost Barry Scherr as Provost after the College's first choice, Robert Schnabel '71, declined an offer for personal reasons.
Two Dartmouth professors have been awarded the highly prestigious John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, which they will use to continue their projects in computer science and Holocaust history.
As the drums sang their last songs and the dancers carried the flags out of the dance circle, Dartmouth's 29th Annual Pow-wow concluded yesterday in Thompson Arena.
When feathers, drums and a dance arbor appear on the Green tomorrow, Dartmouth will know it is ready to welcome one of its unique spring traditions -- the Pow-wow.
In only five years since its inception, the Dartmouth Mock Trial Society has earned its way to an impressive standing in the country, as evidenced by the dozen or so plaques and trophies on the table in Rockefeller 1 yesterday.
After months of planning, Dartmouth Dining Services seems to be serving up their promised kosher/halal dining facility on schedule. Located in Westside Grill on north end of Thayer, the new facility is due to open on the first day of Fall term 2001.
Mohamed Elgadi, who was tortured by Islamic fundamentalists, likes to draw a distinction between Muslims and what he describes as "Islamists."
The Office of Residential Life's sudden decision to lock residential hall exterior doors provoked a variety of student reactions, ranging from relief to exasperation.
A rash of disappearing "gay friendly space" stickers last Fall term caught East Wheelock UGA Mona Jean-Baptiste '01 by surprise. When she last was on campus , incidents of discrimination like the "Ghetto party" and the "Luau party" were fresh in people's minds. But since then, the campus seemed to have learned its lesson.
The Grinch is back if he ever really left.
As national and global attention focus on their home state, Floridian students at Dartmouth have their own divided opinions on one of the biggest election controversies this nation has ever seen.
Students at Colgate University are mourning one of their own, after a tragic drunken driving car accident on Saturday, Nov. 11, resulted in the deaths of four young people, including that of a first year student.
In the midst of ongoing clashes in the Middle East between Israelis and Palestinians, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and College Trustee David K. Shipler '64 spoke Friday about the roots of hatred and the perceptions that characterize the region.