Creating tradition; Three options for new Class Day ceremony
A group of students will pick one of three options to replace the tradition of smashing clay pipes on Class Day that was formally ended by the College last month.
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A group of students will pick one of three options to replace the tradition of smashing clay pipes on Class Day that was formally ended by the College last month.
The women's ultimate frisbee team came close to qualifying for nationals this weekend at the Ultimate Frisbee Regional Tournament here at Dartmouth.
The passing of Green Key is a symbol that summer is just around the corner.
Recently, an organization of 2,000 Dartmouth alumni has been complaining about what they perceive to be an excessive number of administrators at the College.
More students than ever before applied to medical school this year, continuing the recent increases in the numbers of applicants.
Visiting professor and German-Israeli scholar Michael Wolffsohn gave his historical interpretation of the Holocaust and German and Jewish identities last night to a standing room only audience in 3 Rockefeller.
While the band at Alpha Delta fraternity filled the air with music last Saturday, gusts of wind carried the smell of beer across the street where a much younger group of children were having a different kind of fun in and around Alumni Gym and Leverone Field House.
Only one year after their opening, two major Main Street retail stores will close.
The Election Advisory Committee will scrutinize student election guidelines later this month
Office of Residential Life administrators said yesterday that Fall term cluster assignments will be mailed to students May 31, more than two weeks later than the office originally planned.
Warren "Skip" Hance '55, who led Dartmouth to record levels of achievement in fund raising, will retire as vice president for development and alumni affairs.
It's amazing how timing can warp perspective in sports.
Recently, Senator Sam Nunn, head of the Armed Services Committee, touts the gay ban compromise in the Senate as a "don't ask, don't tell" policy. The military will no longer ask recruits about their sexual orientation, nor will it conduct investigations to oust homosexuals. But, this also entails a strict code of conduct forbidding harassment, holding hands and same-sex dancing.
With women rapidly achieving parity at Dartmouth, it seems unfair to have five working sororities versus 15 fraternities. Last week, the Panhellenic council decided to give Kappa Delta Epsilon, the sixth sorority, its full backing, in its drive to be competitive.
The radiation and oncology treatment department of the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital will move to a new $14.1 million building in the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center complex in Lebanon within the next two to three years.
Anne McLane Kuster '78 and her mother, Susan McLane, discussed their experiences as women associated with the College and New Hampshire politics yesterday afternoon.
The College's top two financial officers yesterday presented academic department heads with a plan to avoid a projected budget deficit by cutting the benefits packages given to all College employees. Vice President and Treasurer Lyn Hutton and Provost John Strohbehn explained to the Committee of Chairs that the College's budget planners have balanced the budget for fiscal year 1994, but project a $1.3 million deficit in the following two years.
Former U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh spoke on the need for personnel and financial reform within the United Nations last night before a large audience in Hinman Forum.
The English department will add requirements to its major starting with the Class of 1996, including an eleventh course chosen from a different department and a final culminating project.
The 1,064 students who plan to enroll as members of the Class of 1997 form "the strongest academic profile that Dartmouth has ever had," according to Dean of Admissions Karl Furstenberg.