Hospital to be razed
Administrators are beginning to consider the specifics of tearing down most of the old Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital buildings, which stand nearly vacant on the north side of campus.
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.
Administrators are beginning to consider the specifics of tearing down most of the old Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital buildings, which stand nearly vacant on the north side of campus.
On June 1, The Gap clothing retailers will open its long-awaited store on Main Street but without much "fanfare," a spokeswoman at The Gap headquarter said.
College President James Freedman yesterday appointed Colin Blaydon, a former dean of the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration, as interim Tuck dean.
Both the men's and women's golf teams dominated the course on Saturday, rising to the occasion of their last match of the year.
The women's lacrosse team was not offered a bid by the NCAA for the six-team post-season tournament this year.
Over the past few decades, average grades at many colleges and universities have been steadily creeping up, causing alarm among educators who feel that students today are not learning the value of hard work. By reducing the number of bad grades given out, they say, colleges are eliminating what used to be an incentive to work hard -- fear.
Roger Winter, a government official in immigration services, challenged both the popular conception of refugees and recent U.S. refugee policy yesterday evening.
Toshio Mochizuki, the Japanese Consular General in Boston, told a Dartmouth audience yesterday that current trading tensions between the United States and Japan are merely short-term problems.
Former chair of the Board of Trustees Ira Michael Heyman '51 may become the next head of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
Timothy O'Leary '97, who received national press for exposing himself to gain 100 points in a scavenger hunt, earned himself a police citation and arraignment date, but his team would have won the competition even without those points.
When family problems kept Harvard research psychiatrist Robert Coles at home last night, a panel titled "Altruism, Bigotry and Diversity: A 21st Century Perspective" became a discussion of bigotry and diversity.
Jon Stewart '96, who fell out a window at Alpha Delta fraternity last month, is currently in "satisfactory" condition at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, despite a recently discovered blockage in his small intestine, DHMC spokeswoman Diane Williams said.
A solar eclipse will create a bright golden ring in the sky this afternoon, but viewing the eclipse improperly may cause blindness.
The light and melodically charming operetta "H.M.S. Pinafore" opened on Thursday night to a large audience ranging from pre-adolescents to senior citizens. "Pinafore," written by the British duo Gilbert and Sullivan, was performed last Thursday and Friday nights by the Dartmouth Glee Club, and was directed by Louis Burkot.
The Mother's Day audience for Sunday's Dartmouth Wind Symphony performance of "Theatrical Music" may not have expected smoke, champagne, dance and howls; but they were charmed nonetheless with conductor Max Culpepper's multi-media approach.
Dartmouth completed a turnaround season; Holy Cross was simply turned around.
The women's lacrosse team suffered an 11-4 loss to Ivy League rival Harvard in the last game of the regular season at Chase Field Saturday afternoon.
Perfect.
To the Editor:
Clarence Thomas, Bob Packwood, Bill Clinton...The President of the United States is being sued for sexual harassment. According to a complaint filed by former Arkansas state employee Paula Jones, Bill Clinton, while governor of Arkansas, used an Arkansas state trooper to bring Jones to Clinton's hotel suite during a state-sponsored conference.