Despite vacancies, dorm singles rare
As Dartmouth students leave sub-zero temperatures in Hanover for warmer climes, Winter term brings some much-needed respite to the Office of Residential Life.
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As Dartmouth students leave sub-zero temperatures in Hanover for warmer climes, Winter term brings some much-needed respite to the Office of Residential Life.
In keeping with the festive atmosphere of Homecoming weekend, the College will throw open the doors to Baker Tower and allow the Dartmouth community to tour the top of the premier building on campus.
A recent poll conducted by The Dartmouth indicates that the College's faculty and students lean left of the nation as a whole. Former Vermont governor Howard Dean emerged as the frontrunner in a question about a hypothetical presidential election, and President Bush also received strikingly low approval ratings from Dartmouth faculty and students alike.
As part of yearly improvements to campus, the Office of Residential Life carried out major renovations to the River Apartments and Kappa Delta Epsilon sorority this past summer, while also working toward increasing accessibility for handicapped students.
In the beginning, Dartmouth College was little more than a small log cabin in the dense New Hampshire forest. It represented literally Dartmouth's slogan: "vox clamantis in deserto," a voice crying out in the wilderness.
The year 2000-2001 was dominated by the tragic murder of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop as well as increasing administrative regulation of Greek houses -- and increasing scrutiny of the houses by the community at large.
A black bear has been spotted around campus on several occasions in the past few days, providing amusement and excitement to students, but causing nightmares for Safety and Security and the administration.
For a sum of approximately $1 per day, anyone -- from the passing skeptic to the impassioned believer -- can sponsor the brethren of New Hampshire's newest arrivals, Buddhist monks whose origins lie in Tibet.
For at least one esteemed name in the worldwide field of Jewish studies, religion and raciness may have surprisingly close historical ties.
Colleges across the country are spending more and more money on making students' lives more comfortable, blurring the line between necessity and luxury.
For someone who has been writing poetry since she was in third grade and has a novel due for release in a few months, Vyshali Manivannan '05 is shockingly self-deprecatory.
Despite cutting and then temporarily reinstating Dartmouth's chapter of Amnesty International at the beginning of Summer term, College and Tucker Foundation officials failed to provide any explanation for the elimination and subsequent reestablishment of the group, whose future remains uncertain.
Tubestock, the almost two-decade-long tradition that has come to define sophomore summer, went off without any major glitches Saturday. Minor incidents marring the festivities included a student cutting his head open by a cinder block and the arrest of a student for throwing a beer bottle at a police officer. A few students were detained for being intoxicated.
As part of the Summer Arts Initiative, Hood Museum of Art director Derrick Cartwright led a trip to the Storm King Art Center, an outdoor sculpture museum in Mountainville, N.Y., last Saturday.
In a speech yesterday afternoon, Sierra Leonean drug dealer-turned-pastor Richard Cole spoke of the elements necessary to rebuild a torn nation such as his own: "patriotism, reconciliation and compassion -- with a fear of God."
Construction season has finally arrived in Hanover as the Office of Residential Life works furiously to carry out much-needed renovations on buildings and Phi Delta Alpha prepares to return to campus as a full-fledged fraternity.