African power figure represents ideals
The Hood Museum of Art recently acquired an important addition for its collection of African art with the purchase of a power figure from the former Kongo Empire of Central Africa, now the Republic of Zaire.
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.
The Hood Museum of Art recently acquired an important addition for its collection of African art with the purchase of a power figure from the former Kongo Empire of Central Africa, now the Republic of Zaire.
"I am the blossom pressed in a book,/ found again after two hundred years ... I am the one whose love/ overcomes you, already with you/ when you think to call my name ..."
During the summer of 1976 at the Hanover Country Club two people who were to become a pair of the most highly respected collegiate golf coaches in the United States met for the first time.
The men's soccer team has been looking for something called consistency for quite some time now. Sure, it can win. And it can win big. But they can't seem to win on a regular basis.
To the Editor:
"Planning your escape?" asked Mikey.
As an individual, I cannot defend the rush process. As a sorority president, I know that we must have some form of rush because we have no other way to introduce underclass women to the sorority system. The following article is the collaborative opinion of the sorority presidents.
President Clinton currently leads Senator Dole by 19 points, according to the New York Times on the World Wide Web (the only way for a busy coed to get news). That alone is enough to cause a diehard bleeding liberal Democrat like me to walk around flashing a big silly grin, even in the face of such recent and festering local adversities as midterms, endless rain, the demise of Collis-as-we-knew-it, etc.
Campaign '96. Presidential elections, fanfare, the year of the American electorate. Once again, Joe Bloe will pick a candidate and then smartly tell his friends that he picked the "lesser of two evils." Dissatisfied with politics, he'll wonder out loud why the choice always seems to between bad and worse. Then he'll go home and have a beer, or maybe not, before slumping down in front of the television to catch up on the four hours of watching the boob-tube the average American does each day.
Gene Lyons, acting head of the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding, has been at Dartmouth for 40 years and said his love for students makes it impossible for him to consider leaving.
A former editor of The Dartmouth Review and current ABC News employee was recently accused of illegally taping a doctor in Maryland for a television expose and could face five years in prison if convicted.
Many male students were not ready for a sorority when the first sorority at Dartmouth, Sigma Kappa, now Sigma Delta, was created in 1976.
Dartmouth's new Integrated Math and Physical Science program is enabling 46 freshmen, who are primarily interested in majoring in engineering, math or the physical sciences, to concentrate on and better understand the links between math and science.
A search committee looking for a director for the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding has narrowed down its list of candidates to six and hopes to announce the new director by the end of the term.
This film is, perhaps, the greatest "making-of" film ever made. Such a claim is warranted when one considers what the directors of "Heart of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse" had available to them when creating this film.
"Billy Breathes," and I sigh.
Construction work on the new Ledyard Bridge has fallen slightly behind schedule, and the looming winter weather is causing increased traffic delays on the bridge.
Freshman Lauren Scopaz continues to light up the field during her rookie season with the Big Green.
The Dartmouth field hockey team moved to 8-6 overall yesterday afternoon with a 3-1 dismantling of the University of Vermont Catamounts.
The women's soccer team was back in action yesterday afternoon at the University of Vermont. The Big Green continued their winning ways, as they downed the Catamonts 2-0.