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.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
I'm not evil. Really, I'm not. Ask anyone who knows me. I look like I'm 14 (15 if you're generous), I'm 5'7" when I'm having an honest day, and God knows I couldn't hurt a fly. Yet, after only a few short weeks at the College on the Hill, I have become deathly afraid of revealing my political identity. Deathly may be overstating it a little bit -- I've also learned that people here are, for the most part, pretty friendly -- but, though I am not ashamed at all to believe what I believe, I have already figured out I need to keep my political orientation under raps if I want to avoid hostility.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
There was a tragic aspect to the information session offered Tuesday night. When debating the presence of the Greek system on campus, two steering committee members spoke of the Social and Residential Life Initiative as a chance for Dartmouth to repair what they said was the College's negative media image.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
A bicycle route from Hanover to the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center may soon be under construction if the town's legislature accepts a committee's proposal early next week.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
Parking meter rates in downtown Hanover were doubled to 50 cents an hour on Monday following the outcome of a July vote by local business owners.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
Members of the 2003 Class Council elected their class officials during a special meeting last night in 2 Rockefeller Center.
(10/14/99 9:00am)
A current lawsuit over affirmative action policies at the University of Michigan is bearing witness to a novel defense on the part of the University -- the result of which will likely set an important precedent on race-based admissions throughout the country.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
Baz Luhrmann's "Romeo + Juliet" is showing at Loews this Thursday as part of the Dartmouth Film Society's "In Love With Shakespeare" series.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
On Saturday, the Big Green picked up their first victory of the season when the ball was redirected off a Yale defender into the net. Yesterday against the Terriers, the fickle finger of fate turned against the Big Green.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
I find it only my duty to inform the American General Public that I have not been feeling well lately. Because then perhaps the American General Public will spring into action and, as it has been known to do during times of great crisis, bring me heaping mounds of chicken soup.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
Am I happy at Dartmouth? That's a question I found myself asking a lot last year as a freshman. I was a clueless, nave individual who hadn't really seen much of the world but was now committed to spending the next four years tucked away in some little, obscure, verdant corner of it. But, all things considered, I'd have to say that I was happy at Dartmouth. I felt that I was in the right place for me. And I haven't really thought about it much since. Until this week.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
Princeton University Sociology Professor Dr. Robert Wuthnow spoke on the evolution of religion in the 20th century and likened spirituality to hamburgers during yesterday's 23rd annual Orr Lecture held in 2 Rockefeller Center.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
If the start of the 1990s bore witness to several universities raising 10-digit sums of money for the first time, it seems as though there will be no trailing off at the decade's end.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
Princeton University's Bioethics Professor Peter Singer, who garnered national media attention this summer for justifying euthanasia for severely disabled infants, stirred controversy from the moment he was hired last year.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
Fraternities and sororities across campus have essentially adopted a "wait-and-see" attitude concerning the forthcoming decision on social space by the Trustees' Steering Committee.
(10/13/99 9:00am)
The student representatives to the Committee on the Social and Residential Life Initiative listened to students' suggestions for changes that ranged from both impassioned defenses and condemnations of the Greek system to encouragements of more student involvement at last night's town hall forum at Collis Commonground.
(10/12/99 9:00am)
What subjects should be taught in school and what should be left for parents has always been a topic of debate in the American public school system--especially when those subjects involve moral judgements and personal values.
(10/12/99 9:00am)
What do you get when you take away the world's greatest basketball player from the world's greatest whiner? Well, you get of course, the one, the only, the ordinary, Scottie Pippen. Had Scottie Pippen been asked the question, "Now that MJ has retired, Scottie, what are you going to do?" he probably would have responded with, "I'm going to Houston. Err, L.A. Well, maybe Portland." In one of the most blatant cases of the pot calling the kettle black in professional sports, last week Pippen referred to Charles Barkley as "selfish." A few days later Scottie got exactly what he wanted: a one-way ticket out of Houston.
(10/12/99 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/12/99 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/12/99 9:00am)
Pushing through the back doors of Collis towards Robo and Thayer, a wispy gust greets me. As I descend the steps, my eyes adjust to the darkness of the cold winter evening and the orange glow from the flake filled night sky. To my right, vans are being loaded with packs and cross-country skis as an excited group heads out into the mountains for a magical weekend. Familiar faces shuffle in and out of Thayer and join in the gathering of acquaintances reveling in the quiet of the newly fallen snow. With my feet crunching over a blanket of white towards Mass Row, I recall one of my main reasons for choosing Dartmouth College.