Supercluster programming planned
With a $25,000 budget, students and faculty members of the Supercluster have begun planning the a year of programming for the East Wheelock Cluster.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
With a $25,000 budget, students and faculty members of the Supercluster have begun planning the a year of programming for the East Wheelock Cluster.
Theta Delta Chi received a warning from the College after the Coed Fraternity Sorority Judicial Committee found the house to have violated the College's group accountability policy during Summer term.
For a band whose conception started out with such promise, its sound has caused it to fall flat on its face.
While students affiliated with the art history and studio art departments regularly venture to the Hood Museum of Art, most students admit that they have never visited the museum, or have only been inside very briefly.
If I spit at a professor's face, being the non-athlete, non-legacy student that I am, my academic career here at the college on the hill would more or less be over. If I spit at my boss' face, assuming I had a job, I would most definitely get fired. If I spit at my father's face, he would most assuredly attempt to beat me to a pulp. I think we get the idea here. Spitting at a person, not to mention at that person's face, is a vile, degrading and dehumanizing act, and deserves the harshest punishment.
What do you get when you try to fit 5,000 Dartmouth students, faculty and community members into a single, 3,500-square-foot room? Yes, the Kresge Fitness Center in its overcrowded splendor.
Yesterday afternoon the Dartmouth men's soccer team reaffirmed the notion that the Big Green are a dangerous team on the rise with an impressive 2-0 victory over nationally ranked Northeastern.
It's not so easy being a sophomore. First of all, no Dartmouth student ever fully recovers from the shock of no longer being a freshman.
Unfortunately, it is rare that I feel the material I am learning in class relates directly to my everyday life at Dartmouth. But this summer, I and twenty two other '98s were lucky enough to take Psychology 1 in a small classroom in Silsby, with only one professor and no multiple choice tests. Somewhere in between discussing the progress of our professor's dog's training, and performing energy-aura experiments in class, we also talked about "cognitive dissonance theory."
So," said my Harvard-educated dentist, coming into the small sterile room and walking over to the chair where I sat.
Last Spring, Stephen Schmidt'97 wrote a column titled, "A Voice for the Greek System" [May 17, 1996] in which he urged every member of the Class of 1999 to rush a Greek house, no matter what their personal opinions may be. I disagree with that advice.
The College hosted a ceremony yesterday afternoon to dedicate a plaque in memory of the recently razed Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital.
With corporate recruiting fast approaching for seniors and underclassmen searching for leave-term internships, Career Services could easily be mistaken for a rush-hour metro station.
Provost Lee Bollinger last night addressed the three major First Amendment issues Americans are likely to confront as they approach the turn of the century: extremist speech, the government's subsidizing speech and freedom of speech on the Internet.
Sexual Abuse Awareness Program recently issued a report to the College community, indicating the number of cases of sexual assault or rape has steadily decreased over the past five years.
The Committee on Standards yesterday released its Annual Report to the Community, which revealed that the number of academic violations decreased from 17 to 14 since the 1993-1994 academic year.
The proportion of men to women who participate in varsity athletics matches almost exactly the proportion of men to women in the undergraduate student body as a whole, according to a report issued by the College yesterday.
Dean of the College Lee Pelton has organized the Task Force on Undergraduate Social Life to examine the social options available to Dartmouth students and make any recommendations for change by the end of the term.
"Singin' in the Rain," an all-time American classic, will be shown at 6:45 and 9:15 p.m. tonight as part of the Dartmouth Film Society's series "Reflections."
"Belley...?" You might ask?