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.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
Our nation mourns, for we have suffered a tragedy beyond the description of superlatives. With well over 6000 innocents murdered by a faceless enemy, we Americans now find ourselves surrounded by loss. We have lost our loved ones, our sense of security, and perhaps even a portion of our faith in humanity. Yet, from amongst this despair, we can find pride and hope in acknowledging that we did not lose the ideological war waged by the terrorist perpetrators of these horrific events.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
Who so ever kills an (innocent) human
(09/24/01 9:00am)
Six Dartmouth students were among the thousands of victims of the September 11 terrorist attack on New York and Washington. We grieve for them and for the millions affected by the vicious assault launched against this nation. Terrorists stole our families, friends and mentors. On that fateful Tuesday, we started seeking justice and answers.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
While most students consider Summer term a chance to relax, the news in Hanover this past term was as busy as ever.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
Last year's unexpectedly high yield among accepted students left authorities at the Office of Residential Life scrambling to lodge homeless sophomores; six "tree houses" occupying the lawn in front of the River apartments are the problem's most visible solution.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
In the wake of the terrorist attacks of September 11th, the United States has seen a growing amount of violence directed at Arab-Americans and Muslims across the nation. Though the reported incidents of violence toward Muslims number in the hundreds nationwide, Dartmouth and the surrounding areas of New Hampshire have so far witnessed little or no such behavior.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
In a student poll conducted by The Dartmouth, 1,314 respondents expressed strong approval for the Bush administration's response to the September 11th incidents and supported military action for "as long as it takes" to combat terrorism.
(09/24/01 9:00am)
The terrorists who flew two passenger jets into New York's World Trade Center did not discriminate. None of the people in the twin towers received priority treatment based on age, sex, race or religion.
(09/12/01 9:00am)
Stunned with their briefcases, ash dusting their clothes and shoes a ghoulish gray, they make their mass exodus across the Brooklyn Bridge. A shoe store doles out sneakers to the women; they change out of their pumps, sometimes leaving these oddly elegant displaced bursts of color, in their tracks. Go North, keep going North -- yes, they have made it out of Manhattan alive.
(09/12/01 9:00am)
NEW YORK -- The Dartmouth community joined the rest of the United States today in mourning yesterday's horrific terrorist attacks against New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon. While students on campus monitored developments through TV news outlets, some Dartmouth community members in New York were experiencing the horror from an uncomfortably close vantage.
(09/12/01 9:00am)
Nearly 36 hours after unprecedented terrorist attacks shocked the United States, a crowd of students, faculty and Upper Valley residents assembled on the Green in a candlelight vigil for victims.
(09/06/01 9:00am)
Dartmouth retained its ninth-place spot in U.S. News & World Report's annual college rankings, tying for that position with Columbia University and University of Chicago.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
"American Pie" charmed us because it bravely put intelligent, likeable characters in a teen comedy. The result was a film with sensitivity to match its bawdiness.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
Kate Roiter, two-time captain of Harvard's Ivy title teams, has been appointed the next Dartmouth women's tennis coach.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
The Denver Post has made a stand to refer to the new home of the Denver Broncos solely as "New Mile High Stadium." The stadium's actual name, in line with the wonderful age of selling out in which we live, is "Invesco Field at Mile High." Even before I came to Dartmouth from Denver over two years ago, when the stadium's construction was in its infancy, the controversy over naming the stadium filled the papers. The original Mile High Stadium was and will forever remain sacred to the legions of fans who stuck with their beloved Broncos as they went through all their ups and downs, so the Mile High moniker carries special meaning for Denver residents. No one will part with it without a fight, no matter how much money Invesco offers.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
If the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center hopes to add 466,000 square feet to its Route 120 facilities, the hospital may have to pay for an expensive study of its regional impact and the effects of the proposed expansion.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
Students applying for graduate schools will face new challenges as the Educational Testing Service updates the Graduate Record Exam to include a writing assessment test and the American Medical College Application System struggles with electronic setbacks.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
After a year of renting Phi Delta Alpha fraternity's property for graduate student housing, the College will not renew its lease with the house's national corporation.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
In the latest annual college rankings compiled by The Princeton Review, Dartmouth moved up significantly in the areas of academics, beer consumption and difficulty of admissions, while falling slightly in the quality of life category.
(08/22/01 9:00am)
The trial of Robert Tulloch, the older of the two Vermont teenagers charged with the brutal stabbing deaths of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop, will be postponed until March 11.