Students frustrated by long food lines
Staff shortages within Dartmouth Dining Services and a large on-campus population this fall are making for long waits at peak mealtimes -- and some frustrated students.
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Staff shortages within Dartmouth Dining Services and a large on-campus population this fall are making for long waits at peak mealtimes -- and some frustrated students.
As construction on the Thayer Engineering School moves into its third month, traffic road signs are disappearing and turning up in student dorm rooms.
Subject matter is no longer the only factor distinguishing a course in the humanities from one in the sciences.
Dartmouth's endowment saw an 18 percent investment return over the past fiscal year -- the second-highest return in the Ivy League among those universities reporting to date.
You might be wondering why "Shaun of the Dead," a British film from director Edgar Wright, is getting almost consistently positive reviews from the critics. If you saw the trailer or read a synopsis, you might get the impression that what "Undercover Brother" did for blaxploitation movies, "Shaun of the Dead" does for zombie flicks, though with sharper wit and bloodier violence.
Dartmouth football is only two weeks into its season, but ice hockey is already stealing headlines. For several years, the Big Green (14-11-9 overall, 10-5-7 ECAC Hockey League) has been relegated to the role of bridesmaid -- so close yet so painfully far from league and national prominence. However, according to a couple of leading preseason polls, the College's wedding-bell blues may have come to an end.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
My name is Daniel and I'm a flip-flopper.
Dartmouth classes began last week with the usual discussions of course requirements and the Academic Honor Principle. A number of them have also included warnings for students to stay on good behavior.
Gabrielle Inglis '06 eschewed lazy afternoons on the Green this summer in favor of days exploring Transylvanian caves.
Hot. Congested. Just too much. Tuesday's campus job fair, which will continue today, did not receive rave reviews from students, despite Career Services' cheerful endorsement of the event.
A shift in the College's party registration policy has Greek leaders worried that the current practices in determining keg allotment will leave them unable to adequately serve legal-aged guests at their parties -- let alone provide alcohol to everyone present.
Most Greek houses don't struggle to cram their basements. Several of these organizations, however, are struggling to fill their bedrooms, forcing some houses, like Tabard and Phi Tau coed fraternities, to pull in non-members.
Death Cab For Cutie's Ben Gibbard recently suggested that Interpol should have spent less time touring last year and more time writing the songs on "Antics," the group's second album.
In the past week, Big Green women's golf has gone out to prove a point: despite the fact that they are small in numbers and are have inexperience playing against them, this is not a rebuilding year. Dartmouth women's golf is here to play.
After a rained-out Bucknell Invitational, Dartmouth men's golf opened their season this weekend with a strong showing at the Dartmouth Invitational. The Big Green finished third out of 14 teams to start in an impressive fashion heading into the 2004-2005 season.
Only a week removed from an impressive performance at the Volkl Shootout, Big Green tennis held court against Ivy rivals Yale, Princeton, Cornell and Columbia during last weekend's Yale Invitational. Led by co-captain David Webb '05 and strong doubles play, a young Dartmouth program gained valuable experience going into the ECAC Tournament next Friday.
Within a few months, America will have lost the "War on Terror." There will be no Waterloo, no skirmish, no shot fired. According to the Bush Administration, however, America is winning the War on Terror and bringing "evil-doers" to justice. Unfortunately, the gravest threat to our security and prosperity has slipped slyly beneath our radar. Instead of monitoring our most threatening enemy, Iran, our politicians squabbled over the legitimacy of the Iraq war and Democratic Sen. John Kerry's hokey war record. We have failed to realize the danger in allowing this vitriolic and rabidly anti-American regime to acquire nuclear weapons. If Iran succeeds in doing such, our entire War on Terror will be a bust.