Students: 'Work hard, play hard'
When the sun goes down in Hanover and the light in Baker Tower seems to be the only glow in the night sky, students accustomed to bright lights and big cities may begin to feel a little ... isolated.
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When the sun goes down in Hanover and the light in Baker Tower seems to be the only glow in the night sky, students accustomed to bright lights and big cities may begin to feel a little ... isolated.
Women at Dartmouth are about twice as likely to accept homosexual behavior and to support gay, lesbian and bisexual political agendas than men, according to a recent survey gauging attitudes toward homosexuals.
Leslie Jennings '96 realizes there's not much white space in her daily planner book.
John Sirois '91, former assistant director of admissions, was named acting director of the Native American Program last week.
The Summerphonics, a singing group made up of the sophomore members of the Dartmouth Dodecaphonics and other campus singers will begin rehearsals this week.
Concern about grade inflation and discrepancies between the grading levels in different academic departments has prompted the Committee on Instruction to consider a new method of reporting students' grades on College transcripts.
James Newman '78, an astronaut for National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said he didn't always want to travel past the clouds at mach 25 or orbit the earth in zero gravity.
James Newman '78, who flew his first mission as a National Aeronautics and Space Administration astronaut on the space shuttle Discovery last September, gave a film and slide presentation of his space experience to an audience of about 50 in Rockefeller Center yesterday.
David Stack '96, artist of this year's Winter Carnival poster and t-shirt, said he was inspired to study at the College by the words of another Dartmouth cartoonist, Theodore Geisel '25.
Lucretia "Lu" Martin's history at the College spans four decades. During that time, she has been a special assistant to three College presidents, a witness to the effects of co-education, and coordinator of capital campaigns and alumni donations that have raised hundreds of millions of dollars.
Richard Lyczak '67, a computer science professor at the University of New Hampshire, died Saturday at Portsmouth Regional Hospital, 10 days after being shot in Portsmouth.
Hanover Police Chief Kurt Schimke suffered a heart attack at approximately 8:50 p.m. last night while playing basketball at Marion Cross Elementary School in Norwich, Vt. He was pronounced dead at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Hanover Police Sergeant Chris O'Connor said.
Issues raised by the death of Dan Boyer '94 last term prompted a group of senior class leaders to plan a series of events for the Class of 1994 to discuss common post-graduation worries.
As the orchestrator of four years of planning and construction on the newly renovated Collis Center, Dean of Student Life Holly Sateia has worked on building a sense of College community with plaster and paint as well as through committees and coalitions.
Dartmouth College and Stanford University, recognized for their commitment to higher education for Native Americans, are working together to form a consortium of Native American program directors that will work to improve graduation rates of these minority students at schools nationwide.
When the dust is waxed away from the newly placed grey tiles on the first floor of the renovated Collis Student Center, students will step into a campus pub complete with Dartmouth memorabilia, special food selections and five nights of programming a week.
As part of National Alcohol Awareness Week, the College Committee on Alcohol and Other Drugs is sponsoring a series of events, speeches and discussions promoting awareness and education about "Alcohol at Dartmouth and Beyond."
With the grand re-opening of the Collis Student Center less than a term away, campus organizations will soon start scrambling to secure space in the renovated building.
With the steam tunnel project coming to a close on North College Street, the Class of '93 will have a commencement ceremony less marred by the presence of construction noise and heavy machinery than last year's senior class.
Forced inside by gloomy spring weather, the first performance of the new student run instrumental ensemble Pro Musica filled the Top of the Hop with the strains of brass, wind, percussion and chorus. Erik Ochsner '93, founding music director of the ensemble, conducted the Grande Symphonie Funbre et Triomphale by Hector Berlioz.