Tulving is term's Montgomery fellow
Fifty years ago, this term's Montgomery fellow and renowned psychologist Dr. Endel Tulving was eagerly awaiting a response from the Dartmouth College admissions office while living in war-torn Germany.
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Fifty years ago, this term's Montgomery fellow and renowned psychologist Dr. Endel Tulving was eagerly awaiting a response from the Dartmouth College admissions office while living in war-torn Germany.
The Ledyard Bridge, Hanover's much-delayed, controversial link with Vermont, will be complete by the middle or the end of next month, according to Bob Ayers, project manager at Moores Marine Construction Company.
Berry Library is on course to be completed by the summer of 2000 after several productive months that included the completion of the exterior framework of the library.
Today, construction on the new Berry Library is moving full-steam ahead. But two years ago, when the building's design could be seen only in the models and sketches of its architects, many within the Dartmouth community were embroiled in a fight to change the designs for what they saw as a structure planned in opposition to the style and ideals of the College.
Since 1978, Paul Zaloom has toured the world, playing in such venues as the Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, the Edinburgh Festival and King Tut's Wah-Wah Hut. Tonight he plays the college Hopkins Center.
"Come see the new Andre Agassi!"
Basically, we can do everything on the Internet. Particularly at this school, the great land of the Macintosh, our lives are shaped by the words of the web; we register online, receive class assignments online and hold conversations online.
Upon reading the "Update" that the trustees printed for the town meeting and intently listening to their slideshow and ideas for the future for residential life at Dartmouth, I have a couple of comments and suggestions.
To the Editor:
Social life initiatives. "Structured" choices. The end of the Greek system "as we know it." These loaded phrases, so instantly recognizable on today's campus, have made the last nine months of my Dartmouth career ones of anger and frustration. Like many students on campus (particularly those in the Greek system), I feel both threatened and ignored, and last week's steering committee hearing did little to assuage my fears.
A fire gutted a first-floor room in Wheeler residence hall last night, filling the halls with smoke and leading to the evacuation of the entire building.
While a study released last week by Cornell University on the effects of the U.S. News & World Report college rankings suggests an impact on the number and quality of applications to American universities, Dean of Admissions Karl Furstenberg said the trend is not evident at Dartmouth.
For the first time in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, former New Jersey senator Bill Bradley inched ahead of Vice President Al Gore by three percentage points in the state of New Hampshire in yesterday's CNN and Time poll.
Continuing New Hampshire's political traditions, the top Republican and Democratic presidential candidates are expected to descend upon the Hanover plain to participate in a town-meeting style forum in Moore Theater in late October.
During the six months leading up to the New Hampshire State Primary, presidential hopefuls will flock to the Granite State to gain student support for their campaigns.
How is it that the Harry Potter series, stories by an unknown Scottish author written both about and for young adolescents, turned into the current phenomenon that is taking the United Kingdom and the United States by storm?
Regarding the recent slanted coverage of the Trustee Steering Committee developments, I feel the need provide your reading public with the opportunity to see in print a side of the issue other than the one presented by America's Oldest College Newspaper.
To the Editor:
Three of the nation's foremost scientists in the field of psychology and cognitive neuroscience presented their research about the realms of human memory on Saturday as part of a symposium celebrating the dedication of Moore Hall.
Increasing membership, obtaining an institutionalized voice and credibility, and the fallout of the Residential and Social Life Initiative will dominate the Student Assembly's agenda this year, according to Assembly President Dean Krishna '01.