Group searches for new mascot
In an effort to find Dartmouth a mascot, a group of students unveiled a web survey today to garner community opinion on the topic.
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.
462 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
In an effort to find Dartmouth a mascot, a group of students unveiled a web survey today to garner community opinion on the topic.
In what may prove to be the craziest, hard-hitting, and downright woolliest game this season, the women's soccer team outlasted the Bears from Brown yesterday by a score of 1-0 in Providence.
There is one Dartmouth student you will see in the newspaper a lot, and who, even if you don't know it, represents you.
When a modest Congregationalist minister named Eleazer Wheelock established a small school called Dartmouth College more than two centuries ago, no one knew quite what to expect.
The Student Assembly is working on several service projects this summer including construction of a new basketball court in the River Dormitories, completing a dining guide and installing telephones in all dormitories.
Call them the Big Green Grit if you want, because with their backs up against the wall, they are all heart.
To the Editor:
Dartmouth needs a new mascot. Scratch that ... Dartmouth needs a mascot. Dartmouth's lack of a mascot has been laughed at for years, and it is time for a change.
Think back to that late summer day just before you plunged into freshman fall, when you staggered into the Ravine Lodge at Moosilauke with leftover cucumbers rotting in your backpack and a week-old enviromug encrusted with oatmeal and cocoa. You plop down on a wooden bench and look up at the old trail signs covering the walls. And then you see it, welcoming you to the lodge and to the beginning of your adventures at Dartmouth ... a moose!
Tired of cheering for a large color, four Dartmouth athletes are preparing a campaign to give the College a new mascot.
Just as Winter Carnival forms the foundation of Dartmouth's winter social scene, the annual construction of a giant snow sculpture in the center of the Green is one of the most important pillars of this winter celebration.
During Dartmouth's Winter Carnival, it's easy to believe that the College has a monopoly on winter college weekends.
Greek parties and other social events traditionally abound during Homecoming weekend, and this year is no exception.
Although one of its founders never thought it would last this long, The Dartmouth Review, an off-campus conservative weekly that has sparked innumerable controversies on campus, celebrated its fifteenth anniversary this spring.
To the Editor:
How about the Lone Pines?" I asked my roommate.
"You can get a good education somewhere else, but you can't get a better experience," Fritz Hier '44 said last night at a panel meeting of local alumni who discussed their Dartmouth years.
Both the positive and negative aspects of tradition at the College and in society will be examined during this year's Senior Symposium.
Many students returned to campus after the interim period expecting to make their usual transactions with New Dartmouth Bank, only to find it had been acquired by Shawmut, a bank which is part of a national corporation based in New England.
Perhaps the best bathroom reading here in Hanover is our own Organizations, Regulations and Courses book. In those 10 minutes (give or take) of lavatory study time, you can learn much about the little rules by which we must abide here at Dartmouth.