Moore construction on schedule
Construction of the new $26 million Moore psychology building continues on scale and on budget, and the facility is expected to open in June 1999, according to Assistant Director of Facilities Planning Reed Bergwall.
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Construction of the new $26 million Moore psychology building continues on scale and on budget, and the facility is expected to open in June 1999, according to Assistant Director of Facilities Planning Reed Bergwall.
In a ceremony at the College president's house last night, the 20 seniors with the highest grade point averages were inducted into Dartmouth's chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, a national honor society.
Dick's House decided last week to recommend that all students consider getting vaccinated against the bacteria that cause the potentially fatal disease meningitis, based on a recommendation from the American College Health Association, according to Director of Health Services Jack Turco.
Peace activist William Sloane Coffin compared homophobia to the anti-Communist "Red Scare" of the 1950s in a speech to an overflow crowd in Carpenter Hall yesterday afternoon.
A Hanover resident who opposes the College's plan to build a rugby clubhouse near Reservoir Road has filed suit against the Town of Hanover in an effort to block the start of construction.
Sensible Shoes is a Vermont-based blues band whose 15 minutes of stardom came with the release of, "Philadelphia," the tear-jerking story of a outed homosexual which starredTom Hanks, who garned an Oscar award for his portrayal of his character and Denzel Washington.
"This has been my life today" Sydney Stowe announces soon after I sit down to speak with her about her new position as assistant to the director of film at Hopkins Center.
Head coach Kelly Blasius-Knudsen '91 and her Dartmouth women's soccer team did something to her former squad, the University of Vermont, that no other team has been able to do this year: play them to a draw. The Big Green and the Catamounts played 120 minutes of scoreless soccer at Chase Field yesterday pushing the Green's record to 6-4-2 and the Catamounts's to 6-6-1.
Picture it: ninety minutes into the match, your team has lost its first two matches and is down a set on the three other courts. It looks like a formula for defeat, doesn't it? It had Dartmouth coach Chris Kerr shaking her head. But the women's tennis team showed its mettle and refused to fold, coming back to sweep the rest of its matches and stun Boston College, 5-2. All this against a top team which had beaten them, 5-3, just a few days earlier.
Inclement weather. It seems to be the story of a Big Green golfer's career. A few chilly or wet days on the course are to be expected and overcome when you go to school in Hanover, New Hampshire, a locale about as far removed from the Sunbelt as a collegiate golfer can get. But when a team travels over 600 miles to get to Croaker, Virginia, it might hope for a little more sun than it left behind at home.
Last Wednesday, the front page of this newspaper included a headline which told its readers that the Student Assembly had had a lazy summer as few resolutions had been passed. Lest anyone get the wrong impression, let's take a quick look at exactly how lazy the Assembly was over this past summer.
Looking around this college, it is easy to see that Dartmouth is the land of opportunity. We can do anything we want to here -- from studying Chinese to ballroom dancing, from learning to play squash to starring in a play. But it seems as though there is one thing that very few Dartmouth students do -- take care of our health.
In a just world, there would be no inequalit-es of wealth and income, no winners and losers. No man would wallow in luxury while his neighbor lacked a roof over his head, and secure jobs at good wages would be available for all who wanted them. Oh what a wonderful world this would be! Or that at least is what quite a few people, such as Scott Brown, the Dean of the Tucker Foundation, would have us believe. ["The Growing Economic Class Divide," Oct. 20, The Dartmouth.]
Dartmouth students are in denial about the drinking problems of their classmates, Director of Health Resources Gabrielle Lucke told the Student Assembly last night.
Thirty-seven Dartmouth professors who published books or articles in the past year discussed their works yesterday afternoon at an "Authors and Editors" English tea in the Tower Room of the Baker Library.
Nike pays its workers in Indonesia and Vietnam enough to meet their basic needs with money left over for discretionary spending and savings, professors at the Amos Tuck School of Business said yesterday.
New York State Comptroller H. Carl McCall '58, who has repeatedly denied that he will challenge New York Governor George Pataki in the next gubernatorial election, presented a plan for rebuilding Americans' confidence in government at the Rockefeller Center last night.
Did anyone think the Rolling Stones could make a bad album?
When I met Brian Cina '98 for the first time, I was quite surprised. I managed to get into a fight with him, insult his taste in music, and mangle his last name in the first few minutes.
CONCORD -- Where do the loyalties lie when Dartmouth players are members of opposing teams?