Topliff Renovations
Over the summer, the Co- College invested over $1 million in renovating Topliff. I happened to get a single in the "new Topliff" and it became obvious that nobody had bothered to get any student input on the renovation process.
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.
Over the summer, the Co- College invested over $1 million in renovating Topliff. I happened to get a single in the "new Topliff" and it became obvious that nobody had bothered to get any student input on the renovation process.
The Student Assembly's Fall-term agenda includes several small projects as well as an examination of some College policy issues.
Only two weeks after their return to Dartmouth from two years abroad, at home and on campus, members of the Class of 1997 are already caught up in the excitement and anxiety of their final year at the College.
Recovering from the dizzying days of orientation, many freshmen are settling into life at the College and have begun to make their mark on the Dartmouth community.
United States Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick last night criticized the growing extremism of the political debates in which government officials and the general population engage in a speech last night.
Dean of the Thayer School of Engineering Elsa Garmire is one of three appointees to the President's Committee on the National Medal of Science.
The Dartmouth community will have an opportunity to explore environmental issues in depth when Joseph Sax, a consultant to the Department of the Interior, and George Woodwell '50, founder and director of the Woods Hole Research Center in Massachusetts, visit the College this term as Montgomery Fellows.
The splendor of the art of puppet theater continues when two of the world's most esteemed ensembles perform tomorrow and Wednesday nights as part of the Hopkins Center's Festival of International Puppetry.
The Dartmouth Film Society's Fall term series continued on Friday with a triple feature that included "Manhunter," a film which is now best known as a precursor and model for "Silence of the Lambs" (1991).
Field Hockey: The Big Green went 1-1 on the road over the weekend. Saturday, Dartmouth was downed by a tough Princeton team 7-1. But the Big Green rebounded to defeat Lasalle 6-2 yesterday afternoon behind freshman standout Lauren Scopaz's two goals. Complete story in tomorrow's issue.
Saturday was a big day for the women's soccer team, but it was an even bigger day for senior standout, Jenna Kurowski, as she tallied a Dartmouth record-high of nine points in the Big Green's 6-1 trouncing of the Princeton Tigers.
While it may not have been the efficient dismantling of a Patriot League opponent, all that mattered when Dartmouth boarded the bus home on Saturday was that the Big Green had earned a 21-14 victory over the Lehigh Engineers to improve their record to 2-0 overall.
Collegiate competition returned to the rolling hills of the Hanover Country Club this weekend as the men's golf team opened its fall season with a strong second place finish out of the 13 team field at the Dartmouth Invitational.
The Dartmouth women's volleyball captured third place in a tournament hosted by the Big Green this weekend in Leede Arena. Sparked by sharp defensive play which generated many second chances, the Big Green rattled off three consecutive wins on Saturday to push their record to 6-4.
The women's tennis team kicked off its fall season this past weekend as the Big Green competed against Colgate and Fairfield University in the Dartmouth Invitational. One word can describe the team's performance -- monstrous.
When the Dartmouth men's soccer team traveled to New Jersey on Saturday to face off against a Princeton team that was nationally ranked at the start of the season, they were fully expecting a battle.
Food. We eat it every day. Some people are pickier than others. Some students will inhale anything, while others are overly particular about what they will allow to come in contact with their palettes. Now, with all of the changes that have taken place with Dartmouth Dining Services, the picky have become pickier and the easy-going have adjusted well.
I was confounded by the column "A Picture's Worth a Thousand Words" [September 26], in which Jennifer Parkinson claimed that the columnists who do not want their photographs to appear in The Dartmouth are unprepared to "stand behind their opinions."
After three years in Hanover, my awed, appreciative, freshman-year impression of Dartmouth has since developed into the cynical perspective of one who envisions the campus only in the framework of hum-drum everyday life. But working as a senior interviewer full-time this summer, I was paid to promote the school and all of its wonderful attributes. As I told visitors all about our accessible faculty, our strong language programs and of course, the flexibility of the D-plan, I realized where Dartmouth's real strength lies -- in its students.
You've heard it all before.