Dog Day goes all day, all night
Dartmouth's oldest improvisation group, the Dog Day Players, will perform their first-ever 24 hour improv show in front of Dartmouth Hall, starting at 4 p.m. today.
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Dartmouth's oldest improvisation group, the Dog Day Players, will perform their first-ever 24 hour improv show in front of Dartmouth Hall, starting at 4 p.m. today.
Despite extensive debate and initial objections from most members in attendance, Student Assembly last night agreed to contribute $500 to a group aiming to cull $8,500 from various campus organizations to revamp the Poison Ivy social space.
On a mid-September morning, the sound of bells chiming from over twenty places of worship will greet members of the Dartmouth and Upper Valley community as they face the one-year anniversary of the terror attacks that claimed over 3,000 lives in New York, Pennsylvania and Washington D.C.
College President James Wright announced last week that Dartmouth will make budget cuts in response to a significant shortfall in investment return suffered during the 2002 fiscal year.
As a member of Rockapella, the popular a capella group best known for its work on the television game show "Where in the World is Carmen Sandiego?," Sean Altman came across as a witty, intelligent musician who likes to have fun when he performs.
I am not a big fan of films that set out to change the world in some grandiose, dramatic fashion -- they usually do not and merely end up leaving a disappointing aftertaste.
In a season that was short on highlights, the Big Green football team's 32-27 victory over Yale during the 2001 season certainly stands out. The win, which saw quarterback Greg Smith '02 throw for 406 yards and five touchdowns, allowed the Big Green men to play spoiler at Yale's tercentennial celebration.
Editor's Note: This is the eleventh in a series of articles profiling members of the Class of 2004 on Dartmouth varsity sports teams.
1)I was rejected from a Greek House.
The idea that the average person requires eight glasses of water each day to maintain good health has become widely accepted, but one Dartmouth Medical School physician says the advice seems to lack any grounding in science.
As people seek more information on financial markets and news events from the Internet, the heightened risk of web defacement threatens to lead them to make ill-advised decisions, according to Thayer School of Engineering Professor George Cybenko.
A small group of Dartmouth students demarcated and restored a destroyed Jewish cemetery this Summer with help from local villagers of Sopotskin, Belarus.
For Dartmouth students, life often revolves around an insular and fairly static "Hanover bubble." But Heather Tatarski '04 got a glimpse of the outside world at its most dramatic extremes when she joined MTV and the "larger than life" figures of U2 frontman Bono, "Rush Hour" star Chris Tucker and U.S. Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill on a trip to observe the devastating impact of the AIDS epidemic on Sub-Saharan Africa.
While many Dartmouth students have not yet taken advantage of Dartmouth Dining Services's new delivery service, most report that it is a good idea in the abstract.
Following a somewhat anti-climatic assassination, American super-agent Samuel L. Jackson (who plays NSA Agent Gibbons in the film "XXX") decides that it is time to recruit, train and apply the skills of America's most wanted "social-misfits."
Dartmouth's athletic department is losing former Athletic Director Richard Jaeger this year but has made very strong moves to replace him. Having named Joann Harper to replace Jaeger, yesterday Dartmouth announced that it was hiring Brian Austin to be the senior associate director of Athletics for the College.
Editor's Note: This is the tenth in a series of articles profiling members of the Class of 2004 on Dartmouth varsity sports teams.
Today could be the day that decides the direction of our country. It could be the day that you register to vote.
Princeton University announced on Tuesday that it would move its director of admissions to another administrative position following revelations that admissions officials had broken into Yale University's admissions Web site in April.
When the Women's Studies program changed its name to the Women's and Gender Studies program in early July, the change reflected a larger shift in the feminist movement and society.