Tucker Foundation selects grant recipients
Six students will travel across the globe to places like Calcutta, Katmandu and Ethiopia to do community service as Tucker Fellows this fall.
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Six students will travel across the globe to places like Calcutta, Katmandu and Ethiopia to do community service as Tucker Fellows this fall.
Since their retreat to Moosilauke early in the term, this summer's Untamed Shrews have had more opportunities to get to know each other than in past terms and these efforts should pay off at their performances tonight and Saturday night.
Between Class Council, dancing, a job and classes, Pam Saunders '97 could barely make time for an interview.
Following an extensive application process, the Diabetes Education Program at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center recently received the American Diabetes Association Certificate of Recognition.
With all the adjustments freshmen undergo once they set foot on campus, it is easy to forget that one of the main reasons they are here is to get an education.
The halls of the College reverberate with traditions, but not all of them are all that old. In particular, the traditions revolving around freshmen are in a constant state of flux.
An avid traveler, music lover and football fan, Class of 1997 Dean Teoby Gomez has eclectic interests that go far beyond his office in Parkhurst administration building.
Starting this fall, the College will automatically send student account bills to students' permanent addresses instead of through Hinman mail.
College President James Freedman called for more cancer research at the dedication of the Norris Cotton Cancer Center's new home.
"Welcome to Camp Dartmouth," Government Professor Chris Joyner told his International Law class at the beginning of the term.
Delta Gamma sorority's alternate rush plan failed to meet its members' expectations last term, enticing only seven new members to join the house.
While many students went home for break during Commencement and Reunion, others stayed behind to work for the College and earn some extra money.
The day after graduating from Dartmouth and shaking hands with President Bill Clinton during Commencement ceremonies, Peter Hecht '95 fell ill with meningitis.
The Student Assembly is the only group on campus that can supposedly represent the views of the entire student body to the administration, faculty and Board of Trustees.
Most people at Dartmouth today would have a hard time envisioning the campus without female students. But for 202 years, Dartmouth's alumni ensured the College would remain an all-male institution.
The Student Assembly unanimously concluded at its meeting last night there is a need on campus for a full-time health care professional to deal with the needs of gay, lesbian and bisexual students.
Members of the Student Assembly continue to discuss efforts to restructure the Assembly in the wake of a motion made last week to adjourn for the remainder of Winter term.
After discussing its ongoing quest to replace Webster Hall and passing a bylaw amendment, the Student Assembly toyed with the idea of forming a committee to restructure the Assembly at its meeting last night. Vice President John Honovich '97 submitted a proposal to the Assembly's Executive Committee on Sunday to adjourn the group for the rest of the term and establish a committee to examine the Assembly's structure.
The Student Assembly's Executive Committee last night voted down a proposal to have the Assembly adjourn until Spring term in an effort to attempt to institute sweeping structural changes.
The Student Assembly adjourned early last night and could not vote on a proposed bylaw amendment because it did not have a quorum.