KDE recovers its slush fund
After a one-month police investigation into the apparent theft of $600 from Kappa Delta Epsilon sorority, a sister in the house found the money at the end of August in the bottom of a desk drawer.
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.
After a one-month police investigation into the apparent theft of $600 from Kappa Delta Epsilon sorority, a sister in the house found the money at the end of August in the bottom of a desk drawer.
English Professor Emeritus and conservative commentator Jeffrey Hart emphasized the review of western classics and diversity of study as necessary components of a liberal arts education in a speech given to about 40 students in Carpenter Hall last night.
Sorority rush begins tomorrow night, kicking off the frantic week during which the sorority system will try to bolster its weakest house and the rest of the College's social organizations will try to woo new members.
After three encore performances, the full house at Spaulding Auditorium sounded like it still hadn't gotten enough of mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade.
Bridging the gap between the pop-art kitsch of "Entertainment Weekly" and the straight-laced reporting of "Film Comment," Cahiers du Dartma is the newest kid on the Dartmouth publication block.
In an effort to get closer to the heart of campus, three local businesses run by Dartmouth students and alumni moved into adjoining offices in the Stilts Center on West Wheelock Street, across from the Collis Center.
The women's soccer team will enter two away games this weekend without forward co-Captain Kate Andrews '96.
After a tough first-year varsity season last year, in which it went 2-18, the women's volleyball team has had a fresh start. After five games this season, the team stands 3-2.
The Big Green men's soccer team suffered its fourth defeat in as many games at the hands of the University of Vermont Catamounts today.
Studentsarriving at the "Ivies" this fall are encountering a surprising phenomenon. Women's studies courses outnumber economics classes, often by as much as two to one. Princeton remains the lone exception, but not by much: 25 women's studies courses compared with 32 in economics.
Ithasn't been a great day," my friend wrote this summer, "I just found out a '96 committed suicide last week. And I knew her too, Sarah Devens."
The achievement of gender parity for the Class of 1999 is a significant accomplishment, but the College's work is not finished -- gender parity does not equal gender equity.
Registrar Thomas Bickel will leave the College next month for a six-month sabbatical at the University of California at Santa Cruz tostudy mathematics.
Members of the Class of 1999 received some extra words of unsolicited wisdom from their elders during orientation week this year.
The Student Assembly started its new year last night by discussing its fall agenda and electing its committee on membership and internal affairs.
After several years of Fall-term housing crunches, the Office of Residential Life easily cleared its waitlist, offering on-campus housing to all students who applied on time this year.
College President James Freedman and keynote speaker Barry Sharpless '63, a chemistry professor at the Scripps Research Institute, formally opened Dartmouth's 226th year by stressing the importance of education at Convocation ceremonies at Leede Arena yesterday.
Who could ever imagine the enormous power held within the click of a shutter -- a power capable of unleashing emotions and overturning ideas in mere fractions of seconds. By harnessing this power and coupling it with imagination, diligence, and experience, five prominent Native American photographers are confronting issues of Native American identity in the exhibition "Image and Self in Contemporary Native American Photoart."
Frederica von Stade is not your typical musician. She began at the top and has stayed at the top of her profession for the last 25 years.
In a game dominated by Big Green offense, the women's soccer team surprisingly only overtook the University of New Hampshire by one goal yesterday afternoon at Chase Field.