Visions project to guide future
The Assembly and administration have agreed to use students' Visions to guide their future policies, Summer Assembly Co-chair Janelle Ruley '00 said.
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The Assembly and administration have agreed to use students' Visions to guide their future policies, Summer Assembly Co-chair Janelle Ruley '00 said.
While most students spent Saturday afternoon floating down the Connecticut River in a drunken stupor, Karen Wilkes '00 caught up on some much needed sleep.
The Senate has passed a bill which will enable students on financial aid to receive more federal assistance. President Clinton is expected to sign the bill soon.
Hundreds of College students and local residents flocked to the Connecticut River on Saturday for the 12th annual Tubestock.
The year was 1994.
The last time I went to the circus was when I was seven years old. I think that's almost when everyone goes, unless they're parents with their own seven year olds. Well, that's wrong. Believe me now when I say that the Big Apple Circus is truly fun for all ages. After all, if a jaded college guy can love it, so can you.
The Goo Goo Dolls, Marcy Playground, Fuel and more will be coming to the Upper Valley for 99 Rockfest, an outdoor concert, on August 14.
"You have to leave, NOW!" The voice of the Northeast Security official boomed loudly from behind his flashlight. The tents were almost up, rain was imminent, and thunder and lightning created an ominous glow behind the massive power lines of the Comerford Dam.
I am writing this commentary in response to an event which occurred at the A-Z Women's Resource Center in Phoenix, Arizona on June 30. Perhaps you have heard or read about the now infamous "Baby Phoenix," the first infant to survive the horrible procedure of partial birth abortion. I will summarize the details for those whom this story has not yet reached.
Wow, It's sophomore summer, and it is kind of scary to say that. For so long, sophomore summer was this term of fun in the distant future that everyone looked forward to and made grand plans for. Now it is here; we're already a few weeks into it, and that is kind of frightening.
Two recent Dartmouth alumni are getting paid to follow their dreams.
With corporations and universities world-wide currently fearing massive computer system failures at the turn of the century, Dartmouth computer administrators say the College is well-prepared.
Taran Lent '96, vice president of the Hanover Green Card, is leading the Green Card's overhaul of the DASH office.
By mid-afternoon on Saturday, the Connecticut River will have turned into a sea of rubber tubes, plywood rafts and floating bodies.
Neither El Nino nor ice storms could stop Dartmouth athletic teams from competition this year, and, as in any year, 1997-98 had its share of wins, losses and close calls.
Right now you are reading an issue of Dartmouth's only daily newspaper -- The Dartmouth. "The D," as it is known around campus, is an entirely student-run enterprise, and it is the only daily source of campus news, sports, arts and opinions.
A simple tour around Dartmouth reveals how important computers are on campus. In fact, they are literally everywhere. Every student at the College uses computer technology -- whether to write assignments for classes, check the latest sports scores on the Internet, register for classes, email with friends, or even browse menus of Hanover restaurants and order a pizza.
Student Assembly President Josh Green '00 has joined the ranks of the Grateful Dead, the cast of South Park and Calvin and Hobbes.
Even with James Wright's selection to become Dartmouth's newest president, vacancies remain in four of the College's top administrative positions -- dean of the College, provost, vice president/ treasurer and dean of residential life -- priming the College for a period of administrative transition that will greatly determine the future of Dartmouth.
So you're coming up north to the hinterlands of New Hampshire and you're interested in film. Well, if you're anything like I was when I was a freshman, you're probably pretty worried. With the kind of comments people tend to make about small-town New Hampshire, I'm sure you're all convinced that Hanover doesn't even have movie theaters at this point. Well, to my surprise and soon to be to yours, Dartmouth is chock full of almost everything a young cinephile could want.