After months, search for librarian continues
Five months after the College's head librarian resigned his post, Dartmouth is still searching for a replacement.
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Five months after the College's head librarian resigned his post, Dartmouth is still searching for a replacement.
Dartmouth's anthropology and classics departments elicit high student satisfaction ratings, while biology maintains its traditionally low marks, according to a just-published Student Assembly report on departmental performance at the College.
Loving two people at once, black men loving black men and infanticide were the major themes in the plays presented in this year's 77th annual Eleanor Frost Playwriting Festival.
I'm a born and raised New Yorker, and I love the Yankees.
The Big Green cyclists have returned from Madison, Wisc., with their third straight Collegiate National Championship Team Title.
We can all breathe a sigh of relief after the end of those infamous few days of room draw. The majority of Dartmouth students have successfully interpreted dormitory blueprints, negotiated with overzealous ORL employees and jockeyed for prime Dartmouth real estate. Save for those sad souls stuck on the waitlist, we all know our address for the coming scholastic year, or at least next term. However, for those who've opted for new roommates, either by choice or by the cast of ORL's dice, beware- you might get stuck with a rogue roommate. These folks come in all shapes and sizes, from the seemingly innocuous, meek comp sci major to the brutish and crass frat boy. Although their means vary, their goal is universal -- driving you insane. You might just want to rethink passing up on that single in Topliff or even the lonely solitude of the North dormitories.
John Kerry reminds me of Abraham Lincoln. Before you choke on your B-Feld, understand that I'm talking about Lincoln the person, not Lincoln the legend. Several friends and pundits alike criticize Kerry for not being "likable" and "inspiring." Emerging from the primaries as a "vague" Democrat, Kerry is merely the anti-Bush. All Kerry has going for him, it seems, is his brilliance and strength of character. A walk down memory lane shows Lincoln possessed these virtues. Do we really need a popular, TV-friendly president? We're in serious times and a president with strength of character and intelligence is more compelling than, as one former congressman describes, a "frat boy."
At the end of the academic year, senior thesis writers are breathing a giant sigh of relief after finishing and presenting their projects and finally venturing out of the library.
If a new Computing Services pilot program succeeds, data from computers in every College department may soon be stored in a single backup system -- a move that would efficiently allocate resources left for years without widespread organization.
Forget the hackneyed guides to colleges that rate academics and campus food on a scale of one to five, and go straight to the source: current students. This is the premise behind a two-year-old series of college guidebooks, College Prowler, that uses quotes from actual students on a variety of categories to give high school seniors a realistic and useful evaluation tool without visiting scores of campuses.
After a judicial ethics committee removed Chief Justice Roy Moore from the Alabama Supreme Court for his defense of a two-ton Ten Commandments monument in the court's rotunda, the renegade judge's name would seem to hold little clout. But in this year's race for positions on the bench, Thomas Parker '73 -- along with many other Republican candidates -- is banking on Moore's legacy.
In a contentious show of disapproval for Dean of the Faculty Michael Gazzaniga's leadership, 22 department chairs of about 40 in attendance at a closed Monday meeting reportedly voted for a resolution stating that Gazzaniga lacks the skills necessary to continue in his job.
Following in the footsteps of such journalistic luminaries as David Klein, Rebecca Leffler and Mark Sweeney, The Dartmouth's Katie Van Syckle cops Sweeney's style and asks the questions that others have too much professionalism or integrity to ask. Today, Van Syckle sits down with campus character Griffin Gordon '06.
When fellow graduating Dartmouth students ask Casey Cramer '04 where he's working next year, he can say he is moving to Florida to play in the NFL. While going to an Ivy League school places one on the fast track towards I-banking or graduate school, it is a rare occurrence for an Ivy league student to jump to the NFL. For example, Ohio State alone had 14 players selected in the Draft, whereas the entire Ivy League had only two taken. Yet, on day two of the 2004 NFL Draft, Casey Cramer was selected by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers with the 228th selection in the seventh round.
To The Editor:
To the Editor:
Compromise, an element often lacking in decisions made in all walks of life, has today created grins of satisfaction both in Parkhurst Hall and along Webster Avenue.
While there is a chance that humans are alone in the universe, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence will continue, famed scientist Jill Tarter said Thursday in a speech at the 13th annual Karen E. Wetterhahn Science Symposium in Alumni Hall.
The Undergraduate Finance Committee finalized decisions Thursday on where it would allocate its $755,000 budget for fiscal year 2004-05, beginning June 30.
While it can be difficult enough for regular married couples to find employment in the same city, it is even harder for academic couples to find jobs at the same school. But despite those unique challenges, Dartmouth's professor couples agree that their unions are not much different than a non-academic marriage.