1997 marks anniversary of coeducation, D-Plan
It is no coincidence that this year marks the 25th anniversary of both coeducation and the Dartmouth Plan of enrollment patterns.
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It is no coincidence that this year marks the 25th anniversary of both coeducation and the Dartmouth Plan of enrollment patterns.
Dartmouth students are well-steeped in the traditions of this 228-year-old institution from the moment they step on campus as freshmen dressed for the Dartmouth Outing Club trips until their last days as seniors when they attend a heavily ritualized graduation ceremony.
Greetings! Let us be among the first to welcome you to Dartmouth College!
Changing Faces, the R&B duo who first hit the musical scene three years ago with the R. Kelly inspired single, "Stroke You Up," and quickly submerged under the weight of other talented girl groups on the charts, has suddenly resurfaced with another disc, "All Day | All Night," which features another R. Kelly inspired release, "G.H.E.T.T.O.U.T."
If thou hast a love for Shakespeare, a group of '99s have found a way to bring his plays to Dartmouth every summer.
E says: Cranking out article after article to meet deadlines can be pretty tough, especially on those days when good ideas are as hard to squeeze out as that last bit of toothpaste at the bottom of the tube. So, in order to keep things interesting and fresh, I have decided to collaborate on today's column with a sidekick. His name is DP, and rumor has it that he has one of the most creative minds in the field of journalism. Isn't that right, DP?
The College should proceed with providing cable televi-sion installation to all residence hall rooms. While most dorms are currently wired, there are no immediate plans for providing students with a cable signal.
With the goal of promoting healthy gender relations in the Greek system, Sexual Awareness through Greek Education is planning a kickball tournament to foster positive gender interaction.
Over 400 students turned the Connecticut River into a sea of floating rubber, plywood rafts and bodies Saturday afternoon, despite gusty winds and cloudy skies.
The ad hoc committee on dining services recently released the Summer term dining plan results. Thirteen students, or 1 percent of the 1,160 students enrolled this summer, chose the largest meal plan, where eaters pay $845 for $900 of DBA. The default $700 plan with no option cost was the choice of 459 students, or 40 percent. The $50 option cost did not deter 476 students, 41 percent, from selecting the $525 meal plan. Eighteen percent, or 212 students, opted for the $400 off-campus plan which included a $100 option cost. All of the meal plans are non-refundable.
A 23-year-old male was treated at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center early Saturday morning after being assaulted near Foodstop.
All College residence hall clusters, with the exception of the Choates and the Fayerweathers, have been wired for cable television. It is currently undecided whether a cable signal will ever be provided for the wiring, according to Director of Residential Operations Woody Eckels.
After serving almost 10 years as Dartmouth's Director of College Dining Services, Pete Napolitano said he is "actively" searching for a new position.
Finally, someone made a buddy-cop movie without all the lame police drama trappings.
At the top level in the sport of rowing it's often the small things that count. With technique refined to near perfection, the best rowers must rely on every inch of height and every ounce of muscle to set themselves apart.
This term, in addition to fumbling through columns for this newspaper, I've been working on writing short stories for English 82, the fiction course. Each time I sit down to a session at the word processor (just after I crack my knuckles and rip out clods of hair) I can't help but ask myself all of those philosophical and rhetorical questions that go along with being a writer, such as "What is good literature?" or "What makes one writer great as opposed to another?" and, most importantly, "How the hell am I going to make this story work?" Usually within an hour my fingertips begin to fire away. Soon, I have a humble offering for critique in class.
These days in the U.S., it seems like the government has declared open war on tobacco companies. Recent national laws have forbidden tobacco billboards within 1,000 feet of schools, free gifts with tobacco purchases, and at the center of it all ... lawmakers have raised prospects of increased cigarette taxes, and a new tobacco settlement may soon be reached. The habit of smoking, for so long a minor indulgence and staple of European culture, is now being given criminal connotations normally reserved for drug dealers.
Everything But Anchovies removed its 25-cent surcharge on orders paid for with the Hanover Green Card last week through an agreement to cooperate with the Green Card.
The Class of 1999 may be far from typical in its involvement and interests at the College, but '99s are predictable in their choices of majors.
Saturday marks the 10th anniversary of College President James Freedman's inaugural address and his 10 years of refocusing on intellectualism.