Residents appeal lighting decision
Seventeen Hanover residents are appealing what they claim to be an unjust misinterpretation of the zoning ordinance by the zoning board in favor of the College.
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Seventeen Hanover residents are appealing what they claim to be an unjust misinterpretation of the zoning ordinance by the zoning board in favor of the College.
About 10,000 visitors will descend on Dartmouth's Memorial Stadium tomorrow to witness the 45th annual Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl, a charity football game that benefits hospitalized children and burn victims.
The Hanover resident who is seeking to halt the construction of the $2 million rugby clubhouse appealed his case to the New Hampshire Supreme Court on July 21. Frederick Crory will seek the Court's decision on whether the clubhouse fits the town zoning ordinance's definition of educational use or if it is a building associated with outdoor recreation.
The Senate has passed a bill which will enable students on financial aid to receive more federal assistance. President Clinton is expected to sign the bill soon.
For most Dartmouth incoming freshmen, the end of senior year marks a time of festivities and tearful good-byes to friends heading off to school a month earlier. It is also a time when scores of envelopes from the College fill the mailbox with all sorts of information about freshman year.
A Grafton County Superior Court justice has ruled the College may build its $2 million Rugby Clubhouse without the approval of the zoning board of adjustment, after an almost year-long legal battle.
Children living in areas where water has been treated with silicofluorides have higher levels of lead in their blood, resulting in more violent behavior, educational failure and disease, according to the preliminary findings of Government Professor Roger Masters and his research partner Myron Copland, a retired chemical engineer.
A Dartmouth graduate student was allegedly assaulted by a former College custodian armed with a knife as she walked down South Main Street early in the morning on Wednesday, June 10.
For Chris Miller '63, creator of the movie "Animal House," Green Key was the best weekend of the year.
With Commencement just a term away, the administration is in the process of selecting a speaker for an important year, the 25th anniversary of coeducation at the College and James Freedman's final year as College president.
One of the first students of Dartmouth College, Joseph Vaill, class of 1778, spent his first week in Hanover sleeping on the floor and covered with narrow Indian blankets. Soon, he and his friends were able to acquire wooden bunks, straw matting and crude culinary tools. To keep warm, they fed logs to the constantly burning fire.
College President James Freedman announced yesterday the appointment of a seven-member search committee to find the provost to succeed James Wright, who announced last term that he will step down from his position after June 30.
The Faculty of Arts and Sciences unanimously voted to change the current procedure for calculating "laude" honors at their Winter term meeting yesterday afternoon.
Imagine yourself in the 1920s, dressed in a tuxedo or an elegant gown, lounging in a grand ballroom, a martini dangling from your hand. Couples dance to the swing band, which alternates, cabaret-style, with a jazz band. Worn out from swinging, you and your friends head downtown to the speakeasies to chat over a drink or two.
The revival of the jazz age is carried on Friday night with a showing of "Winter Carnival," a 1939 film written by Budd Schulberg '36, Maurice Rapf '35 and famed author F. Scott Fitzgerald.
On Jan. 22, 1973, the Supreme Court of the United States voted seven to two to prohibit states from interfering with a doctor's medical decision to perform an abortion during a woman's first three months of pregnancy.
The Berry Library project still needs to raise at least $10 million in funds for the academic side of the library and $5 million for the library side, though the official groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for May 5, 1998.
One third of local children in grades six through 12 own promotional gear from cigarette companies, according to a study released by the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in December.
Dean of the College Lee Pelton arrived on campus in 1991, so eager to learn about student life at Dartmouth that he spent a day with a student attending classes and extracurricular activities with him -- he even stayed overnight in the student's fraternity house.
Onche Ugbabe '98 doesn't like to "put things in boxes." When asked what kind of music his senior fellowship centers around, his response is a little chuckle and shake of his head.