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.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
The Dartmouth: Sports are full of great nicknames, like former NBA star Chuck "The Rifleman" Person, 1982 Masters Champion Craig "The Walrus" Stadler and former hockey goalie Georges "The Chicoutimi Cucumber" Vezina. As an athlete, have you encountered any particularly memorable nicknames?
(09/26/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/26/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/26/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/26/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/26/02 9:00am)
Something is rotten in the state of Germany. His name is Gerhard Schrder. He is a liar. He is a backstabber. He is the Chancellor of Germany. A little over a year ago, Germany and America were very close allies. Americans drove around in BMWs and noshed on bratwurst. Germans listened to Madonna while donning blue jeans. Their respective governments shared just as close a relationship.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
That's how my first year was -- like a typical fall day. Foggy and overcast in the morning, the day would transform into a beauty, with individual rays of sunlight permeating the watery pallor hanging over the Green.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
The calendar may say autumn, but with wide-eyed '06s shmobbing their way around campus, full of excitement, wonder and anticipation, one could easily mistake it for spring: the same sense of rebirth and renewal that accompanies every new class is back and as strong as ever.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
It's 2:00 in the morning, right before the end of term, and nearly everyone urgently needs to finish a project or paper. Hands shaking from caffeine, they offer the graphic-laden fruits of their labor via blitz to the public printer, but the file is too large.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
Residents of Epsilon Kappa Theta sorority have been the first students on campus to use phones employing a new technology called VoiceOver IP, which transmits phone calls across the College's Ethernet data networks.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
The Avery family of Fairlee, Vt., announced Saturday their donation of $1 million to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in honor of Dr. Stephen Plume's retirement.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
The reactivation of a 10-year-old policy granting office space in Robinson Hall to student organizations based on an annual application has granted offices to 19 groups previously without space, leaving others cramped or without offices.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
It seems that in the immediate wake of important events and/or great tragedy, the American public looks first to the media, then to the government and then lastly to the commentary of Americans in the context of popular culture. The first two reactions are predictable -- almost to a science. The media is sensationalist and the government is reactionary. Only the final element is consistently a wild card.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
The marketing slogan for the 2002 Dartmouth football season, "Why not us? Why not now?" has not impressed many members of head coach John Lyons' squad.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
The marketing slogan for the 2002 Dartmouth football season, "Why not us? Why not now?" has not impressed many members of head coach John Lyons' squad.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
Rebekka Stucker '04 lifted the Dartmouth field hockey team over Boston University, 3-2, by scoring her first goal of the season with just 4:40 left in Monday afternoon's match at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/25/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/25/02 9:00am)
America lost its moral way years ago. It bounced on the aimless avenue of ambiguity like a dazed child springing on her trampoline. This is not surprising, because nobody knows the future; one is always on the avenue of ambiguity, especially with morality. Nevertheless, America seems to have more than lost its way. It lost the map.
(09/25/02 9:00am)
Amidst the current national debate over the proper United States policy toward Iraq, the pro-invasion argument is based almost exclusively on Iraq's putative weapons of mass destruction programs and the Iraqi government's ties to terrorist organizations.