Bosnian diplomat cancels speech
Muhamed Sacirbey, the ambassador from Bosnia-Herzegovina to the United Nations, canceled a speech scheduled for last night in Cook Auditorium.
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Muhamed Sacirbey, the ambassador from Bosnia-Herzegovina to the United Nations, canceled a speech scheduled for last night in Cook Auditorium.
The recent peace agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel will help the United States secure its interests in the Middle East, according to a State Department official who spoke here yesterday.
With graduation and what lies beyond fast approaching for the Class of 1994, seniors' anxieties about the future are mounting as deadlines for graduate school and corporate recruiting interviews approach.
A new task force will study the status of women at Dartmouth after more than two decades of co-education.
Dr. Michael Gaylor, who ran the staff of psychologists and psychiatrists for the College's Health Service, resigned Nov. 1.
The chair of the Will to Excel capital campaign yesterday said an $8 million donation will allow the implementation of a new curriculum that was delayed last spring because of a lack of funds.
After weeks of picking up momentum for the showdown of the year in Ivy League football, Penn and Princeton, both 7-0 overall, 4-0 Ivy League, finally set their collision course in stone this weekend.
The Big Green football team needs to win its final three Ivy League games to get a shot at a fourth consecut....
This past weekend the men's and women's cross country teams competed in their season-ending meet at the Heptagonal Championship which pitted the squads against the Ivy League and the U.S. Naval Academy.
Flaubert said, "One is not born a woman, one becomes one." This ancient quote seems one worth contemplating in light of recent editorials, articles, discussions and graffiti which have been circulating our campus since the beginning of rush, claiming to analyze the pros and cons of Greek membership and activity.
A week ago today, Dan Boyer '94 took his own life. Yesterday, friends and family gathered for a service of "celebration and thanksgiving."
Recently one of the most disgusting and insulting decisions was made in the name of the international community. Side by side with comrade Nelson Mandela, a racist murderer Frederick W. de Klerk was given the Nobel Peace Prize.
After a decade of providing Upper Valley women with what advocates say is a more personal method of giving birth, the Nurse-Midwifery Service at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center celebrates its 10th anniversary with an open house this Sunday.
As part of the $1.9 million renovations on the old Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Facilities Operations and Management removed large quantities of asbestos.
If you are tired of roaming around looking for the big party on Webster Avenue every weekend, Kenji Sugahara '95 may have the solution.
Former U.S. Senators Warren Rudman and Paul Tsongas '62 will speak at the College Nov. 15 as part of an effort to focus attention on the perils of the federal deficit in the politically crucial state of New Hampshire.
Only 24 hours after the Homecoming bonfire roared in the center of the Green, students had a chance to play in the first snow of the year.
Members of the College community remembered Dan Boyer '94 with speeches, prayers and music at a memorial service in Rollins Chapel yesterday.
Secretary of Education Richard Riley appointed College President James Freedman in September to the board of a federal program that doles out more than $8 million in educational fellowships each year.
Western Opera Theater, a touring group of the San Francisco Opera, put its best foot forward with a cast of excellent young singers in a performance of Strauss' comic classic "Die Fledermaus" Thursday night in Spaulding Auditorium.