Still on tap: Keggy returned
A traumatic episode came to a close late last week for would-be mascot Keggy the Keg, when staffers of Jack-o-Lantern humor magazine recovered the missing costume.
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A traumatic episode came to a close late last week for would-be mascot Keggy the Keg, when staffers of Jack-o-Lantern humor magazine recovered the missing costume.
A constitutional change that critics say would have threatened the voting rights of the College's alumni failed to pass at a meeting of the Dartmouth Association of Alumni this afternoon.
Following the announcement of Keggy the Keg's disappearance early this afternoon, the Jack-o-Lantern humor magazine received a picture of the unofficial mascot, bound and gagged, in a threatening email message.
This is the third in a series of three behind-the-scenes articles looking at the creative theatrical process by chronicling the theater department's mainstage production of Arthur Miller's play "A View from the Bridge."
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I'd like to express my overwhelming glee about Dartmouth's latest plunge into the national media. On Nov. 18, Keggy the Keg was the subject of a debate segment on ESPN's popular daily show "Pardon the Interruption."
Money. Power. Status. Stability; markers of success, right? "No, no, wow, that's way too shallow," you say. Ok yes, so then what do you think, what makes a "successful" person? Lately, I am grappling with my conception of what a successful life looks like -- mainly my own. I recently had a dinner conversation (and a midnight conversation, and a telephone conversation, and a blitz conversation -- this subject is not on my mind at all, really, I swear) where the subject matter has somehow come from discussing my housemates' latest obsession with country line-dancing to discussing what I need in my life to be a successful person.
I was getting more flustered than Jeff Weaver in extra innings. Hitting the strike zone from 60 feet away is hard enough when nobody is watching, but I was looking down the barrel of a radar gun, the lens of a camera, and into the mitt of a kid who could catch better than I could throw.
Compared to the national average of 22.6 percent, only 11.1 percent of Dartmouth undergraduates are national Pell Grant recipients, according to a study released earlier this month by The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. The article entitled "Pell Grant Count Puts Most Ivy League Schools Near the Bottom in Percentage of Low-Income Students" revealed that all eight Ivies scored below the national average in percentage of undergraduates receiving Pell Grants.
A Dartmouth student-run gleaning program that prepared 1350 meals for local needy families is trying to change the way local non-profits and Dartmouth volunteer programs fight hunger in the Upper Valley.
The Canoe Club, the latest addition to Hanover's dining scene, opened its doors Sunday night to positive customer reviews."The Canoe Club offers an intimate atmosphere, good beer, and great music," said Chris Hoyt, one of the customers on Sunday. The dimmed lights, the walls covered with Dartmouth memorabilia and the tunes of a bluegrass band attracted a crowd of community members, Dartmouth undergraduates and graduate students.
If the most a songwriter can hope to do with his art is to create something that resonates with the listener, then Chris Bradley '92 is one of the most successful songwriters in New England today.
Elizabeth Michelman '77's post-college record did not immediately point her in the direction of becoming an artist. Like a lot of Dartmouth students, she's led a varied and exciting life.
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