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.
(10/16/97 9:00am)
I was reading a recent article in the Boston Globe Sports section about Dartmouth alumna Diana Goldman Bronsihan. At a time when we constantly quibble about how much the fraternities and sororities define the College, whether or nor to have the Indian reinstated as a mascot, or whether or not Dartmouth is too intellectual or lacking in academic credibility, it is Bronsihan who should help put these debates in perspective and tell us what Dartmouth is really all about.
(10/16/97 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/16/97 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/16/97 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/16/97 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/16/97 9:00am)
One of the nicest things about Dartmouth is being able to get away from it for a bit. Last weekend I went home briefly, and this weekend I'm going down to Boston to see the Head of the Charles Regatta. Short trips, just two hours each, and really not that big a deal, but it is a nice change from campus scenery.
(10/16/97 9:00am)
Veteran actress Meryl Streep, winner of two Academy Awards and a nine-time Oscar nominee, will be honored this Saturday evening with the Dartmouth Film Award.
(10/16/97 9:00am)
Although there may be easier ways to enjoy alcohol, beer pong has evolved in the basements of Greek houses since at least the mid-1950s, and some claim its origins go back to the beginning of time.
(10/16/97 9:00am)
Medical researchers at the College have concluded that the amount of medical care Americans receive in their final months varies widely with geographic location, and is often a function of the amount of care available in the region, rather than of necessity.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
In celebration of William Hogarth's three hundredth birthday, the Hood Museum of Art presents "'Pictur'd Morals': Prints by William Hogarth," an exhibition that focuses on satirical depictions of eighteenth-century British society and its morals.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
The Dartmouth field hockey team made strides over the weekend in the national rankings only to watch that slip away in their 2-1 loss to Stanford yesterday afternoon in a neutral-site contest at Boston College. It was the second neutral-site game for the Big Green in as many games as Dartmouth thumped Bucknell 5-2 on Saturday afternoon in Cambridge.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
I don't know how many of you are following what is going on concerning the appointment of a new provost, but everyone should be shocked and appalled at what is happening. First, I will fill you in with the background information and then I will show and explain the abuses of power and position that are going on among the faculty and the administration.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
This weekend, alumni, students, and others will gather at Dartmouth to celebrate the College's 25th year of co-education. It is an anniversary of a period in Dartmouth's history when the administration finally realized that a single sex educational enclave was an anachronism, and that men and women could in fact live and learn together. This fact, rather obvious now, was only just then beginning to dawn on some members of the Dartmouth community.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
Dartmouth takes pride in diversity. It is a school that makes serious attempts at creating a heterogeneous atmosphere in a relatively homogeneous region. There are culture nights, clubs created along racial/ethnic lines, affinity housing, the Language Study Abroad/Foreign Study Program, and many other steps taken to try and ensure a diverse Dartmouth. There is, however, one thing the school has missed.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
Although the full Student Assembly made no definitive decisions and passed no major resolutions this summer, its committees have been working in a variety of different directions, the committee chairs said last night.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
The best show this month is free, and it is not playing at the Nugget or in the Hopkins Center: the beautiful autumn foliage.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
The debate between Cree Indians and Hydro-Quebec came to Dartmouth in 1991, when a majority of students demanded that the Board of Trustees divest almost $8 million invested in the company.
(10/15/97 9:00am)
In an emotional discussion before a diverse crowd of 60 people at the Hopkins Center last night, a panel of six critics of Hydro-Quebec hydroelectric attacked the company, claiming its proposed James Bay dam project will devastate the local environment and the native Cree Indian people.
(10/14/97 9:00am)
Eliot Fisk, renowned classical guitarist, will display his extraordinary technique and artistic vision in concert today in Spaulding Auditorium at 8 p.m.
(10/14/97 9:00am)
Janet Jackson, uber-giant in the R&B and hip-hop music industry, has with her past offerings shared her most personal experiences with the public.