College, Greek leaders agree on fall rush
The College has approved proposals from the Greek system to return rush's start date to Fall term, with the process slated to begin at the end of the third week of classes.
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The College has approved proposals from the Greek system to return rush's start date to Fall term, with the process slated to begin at the end of the third week of classes.
Perhaps the most ridiculous financial extravagance of my young adult life was spending $80 on a Facets Video three-DVD set of 10 hours of Polish film that I had never even seen before. But damn, it was worth it.
You ever been to Calgary? Chances are, you haven't. It is a beautiful, modern city with wide boulevards and ample evidence of active urban planning. A small cluster of suburbs surrounds the city before giving way to rolling foothills, and visible from most vantage points in the city is the towering grandeur of the Canadian Rockies.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
In T.J. Rodgers' recent op-ed, he accuses Professor Wilder of misrepresenting his perspective on diversity (The Dartmouth, "Popular Trustee Candidate Responds," May 12). He writes: "If Wilder had taken the trouble to read my trustee candidate statement on the Dartmouth website . . . he would have read the following introduction, which is followed by a statement that is obviously inconsistent with his claims." However, the quote he cites is not in the introduction to his candidate statement -- it is not in his candidate statement at all. Instead, it was written in response to a question posed to all candidates: "How would you address the challenges that confront the campus with respect to diversity, inclusiveness and principles of community?"
The U.S. political system has been steeped in religion since its original roots in Puritan traditions, according to James Morone in a lecture about his book "Hellfire Nation" at the Rockefeller Center Wednesday afternoon.
Editor's note: This is the fifth in a multi-part series on employment conditions for students at the College.
Ten fluorescent green bikes stood outside Thayer Hall courtesy of Student Assembly Wednesday night at 7 p.m., just waiting for students in need of quick transportation across campus.
When the Democratic National Convention assembles in Boston in late July, two politically active Dartmouth students will be present as delegates. Sarah Ayres '06 and Jacob Crumbine '07 will perform a largely symbolic civic duty and cast votes nominating former Vermont state Gov. Howard Dean to serve as the party's presidential candidate.
Andrew Harvard '71 will serve as director of Dartmouth's Outdoor Programs Office and associate dean of student life, the College has announced. A lifelong environmentalist and outdoorsman, Harvard says he plans to use his position to encourage outdoor experiences for all Dartmouth students.
On the weekend of May 8-9, the men's Ultimate frisbee team showed that they were more than just the cultish group of students that throws food and talks too loudly in the corner of Collis every day. The team, christened the Pain Train (referring to a line in the "Terry Tate: Office Linebacker" ads of yesteryear), came within two games of returning to the national tournament before losing to No. 3 seed Harvard 16-14.
After finishing the 2004 season with an 8-5 overall record and tied for third in the Ivy League, the Big Green captured seven spots on the 2004 men's lacrosse All-Ivy teams and six selections on the All-New England teams.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
India is still relatively young as countries go. However, in the less than 60 years that it has been a self-governing democracy, it has seen its fair share of both triumph and turmoil. It also has found itself facing questions that more established democracies, such as our own, have not yet resolved. The refusal of Sonia Gandhi to become Prime Minister of India this past week highlights a number of these issues. For one, she is a woman, albeit in a country with a tradition of female leadership. She is also a member of one of India's predominant political families. She is a Catholic in a country where Hinduism is the dominant religion, and where faith is a very decisive issue. But perhaps the main reason she declined the position is that she is a foreign-born citizen of India.
Four months after Campus Cupid's launch promised students a new means of finding love at Dartmouth, the dating service has a new website in the works.
Editor's note: This is the fourth in a multi-part series on employment conditions for students at the College.
Natural body care products go one step further than "Tom's of Maine's" niche items when Drew Wilkins '03 concocts his own special toiletries from common natural ingredients.
Rumors abound about tunnels snaking underneath the College that could provide chilled-to-the-bone students a way to escape cold winter walks to class. But just a single tunnel actually exists, built to house the College's steam, chilled water, high voltage electricity, telephone and telecommunications systems.