Search for Latino Studies professor unsuccessful
The Latino Studies courses planned for this year will go untaught because the Latin American and Caribbean Studies department has not yet found someone to teach them.
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 Latino Studies courses planned for this year will go untaught because the Latin American and Caribbean Studies department has not yet found someone to teach them.
The University of Michigan will confirm or deny the rumors circulating that College Provost Lee Bollinger has received a nomination for the position of university president when it releases its short list of nominees for president of the university on Monday.
The College is conducting an investigation of Beta Theta Phi fraternity, which is currently under suspension until Nov. 26.
Food and Drug Administration Commissioner David Kessler last night held Joe Camel up as an example when he condemned the tobacco industry for deliberately directing cigarette advertisements toward youth markets.
The Alloy Orchestra, a regular visitor to the College's artistic landscape, will perform their original score to accompany the 1927 film "The Unknown" by Todd Browning. The Orchestra is known for designing creative score to silent and classic films.
A brand-new website has just exploded all over the Internet. With a Technicolor boom, "Grapejam," a self described "smorgasbord" of video-clips, satire and interactive theme rooms, is definitely worth checking out.
Until the start of this season, the Oakland Raiders of the National Football League were the most dominant team in professional sports history. The Raiders were the most dominant presence in professional football, if not all of sports from the late 1960s through the mid 70s. Just as imperious was the personality of the team's owner, Al Davis, whose rebellious attitude and abrasive nature were focused on winning and nothing else. His ubiquitous message of "Just win baby," would become the commanding theme in sports.
Augie Lopez's '97 right-footed blast with 2:20 left in the second half broke a scoreless tie, as the Big Green men's soccer squad snapped a two-game losing streak with a win over intra-state rival UNH. The victory launched Dartmouth into the winner's column as the Green improved to 4-3-1.
After pounding Siena 9-0 Monday, the Big Green field hockey team kept on their now two-game winning streak yesterday afternoon, defeating the University of New Hampshire 2-1.
To the Editor:
Ok," said one of the Aquinas House chaplains. "The next question I'm going to ask you is, what is it about you that makes you unique?"
In "The Age of the Obvious," [The Dartmouth, Oct. 10] Abiola Lapite '98, an esteemed columnist, raises some very valid points, the kind of which may go fairly unnoticed from now on, since the preoccupation of these pages will decidedly lean towards the impending presidential elections.
In the past two years or so, I've heard many of my peers use several phrases which seem very characteristic of the times we live in. Despite conscious attempts on my part to avoid using these catch-phrases, I find them seeping into my own language. Two of my favorites are "It's all good" and "It's all relative." To many, these may seem unrelated, perhaps even forming a "random" collection of expressions, as it were. But to me, these two phrases all point to one theme: our culture of triviality.
After a frantic dinner at Home Plate one night last week my friends and I ran down the steps of Thayer to the women's rest room at the bottom level. We had only a few minutes to spare before our Sorority Rush '96 parties were to begin that evening. A bit nervous, we needed a quick washing of the hands, a little lipstick application, and a reassuring comment from a best friend.
Students watching the vice-presidential debate last night were impressed by the performance of Republican candidate Jack Kemp but rated the debate as a draw overall.
After electing 38 members to its class council, the freshman class is looking forward to setting its agenda for the year, while upperclass councils already have a full schedule.
Tour guides for the College will have a new stop on their itinerary this year, the four newly erected brick pillars standing in front of Thayer Dining Hall.
With breathtaking pictures on the screen behind him, world-renowned climber Todd Skinner spoke to more than 250 students at the Cook Auditorium last night.
College President James Freedman's traveling shoes may be wearing thin, but his off-campus itinerary remains long and diverse.
"Super 8 1/2" is the tale of a washed-up porno star (Bruce La Bruce) "rediscovered" by an underground avant-garde lesbian filmmaker, Googie (Liza LaMonica) who wants to make a documentary about him titled "Bruce."