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(09/01/05 9:00am)
I would like to introduce you to the one element of my life at Dartmouth that has meant the most to me: the Dartmouth Outing Club. It has been a wonderful way to become comfortable with the wilderness in which we are situated in, with my capabilities as a person and with the changes that time brings to all lives. The people I've met, the things I've accomplished with them and countless lessons learned have been an amazing return on the time I've spent playing outside with the Outing Club.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
"Riner! You are lost in the sauce!" Gunnery Sergeant Sampson screamed into my ear. I snapped to attention, petrified. I had been caught and knew I was about to get "smoked." I had drunk all the Gatorade in my water bottle -- and thought the evidence was disposed of -- but the sergeant's eagle eye had spotted a bit of powdery residue. He berated me: "I guess you didn't know Gatorade was contraband, did you Riner? No, you knew but you didn't care. You were too busy smoking and joking to care."
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Despite its reputation as a rural campus miles from any sign of civilization, Dartmouth has nevertheless attracted an array of celebrities to campus, from talented musical artists to high-ranking politicians.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Five hours every day. That's how long the offices on the second floor of Robinson Hall are quiet when The Dartmouth is in production.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
From the Connecticut River to Lake Umbagog and from Camel's Hump to Moosilauke, the Dartmouth Outing Club gives the Dartmouth community the opportunity to enjoy the north woods of New England.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Members of the Class of 2009 hoping to nourish their souls in addition to their minds have a wide variety of religious organizations available to them at the College. The active network of spiritual groups on campus provides an array of services for students, from social outings to opportunities for worship.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Ever since College president John G. Kemeny and Professor Tom Kurtzas invented the BASIC programming language in 1963, Dartmouth College has been known worldwide as a technological innovator. From developing its own e-mail standard to deploying wireless across campus, Dartmouth has been on the leading edge for over 40 years.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Incoming freshmen who want to help influence the direction Dartmouth will take during their four years are encouraged to join Student Assembly, the student government organization.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Dartmouth's administration has focused on issues pertaining to the quality of student life in recent years, and has addressed the Greek system and facility improvement during a time of significant policy formation.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
On a campus where students of color comprise over one-quarter of the student body, Dartmouth reflects diversity through a growing collection of minority student organizations, most of which are open and available to the entire campus.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
2001-2002
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Seeing as consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton ranked Dartmouth, alongside the U.S. Constitution, Oxford University and General Electric, as one of the world's most enduring institutions, it comes as no surprise that the College's storied 236-year history is full of challenges faced and overcome.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
The 1,081 students from around the globe who intend to matriculate in the Class of 2009 this coming fall, will form Dartmouth's strongest academic class to date.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
In the final days of errands and goodbyes before the members of the Class of 2009 pack up their cars and drive to the airport, the future first-years -- full of excitement and nerves -- may wonder about the place where they will be spending the next four years. Thanks to the host of traditions that will immediately greet them upon arrival in Hanover, they won't have to wait long for the answers to their questions.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
You're almost there. The smell of freshly cut grass on the Green and colorful foliage that is changing far too early in September will surround you before you know it. Welcome to Dartmouth!
(09/01/05 9:00am)
WEB UPDATE, Sept. 5, 5:13 a.m.
(08/23/05 9:00am)
Few musical idioms have proven as commercially unsuccessful, or as cultishly followed, as power pop. The genre emerged in the early '70s as a reaction against the pompously self-serious cock-rock excesses of bands like Led Zeppelin to combine the driving, chunky guitar riffs of The Who with tender, catchy melodies and the upbeat jangle of The Byrds. The '70s are seen as the golden age of this music, providing us with seminal half-forgotten acts like Big Star, The Raspberries, and Cheap Trick, and though many power pop bands had hits (Cheap Trick's "I Want You to Want Me" is perhaps best known), none of those bands crossed over to mainstream stardom.
(08/23/05 9:00am)
After two months of cautious search, Dartmouth found a new women's rowing coach in Wendy Levash, the College announced last Thursday.
(08/23/05 9:00am)
Several weeks ago, Iraqi Prime Minster Ibrahim al-Jaafari called for the United States to begin withdrawing American forces from Iraq by as early as 2006. President Bush correctly deflected the Prime Minister's statement by refusing to set a time table for the American disengagement from the war-torn land as such an action would give the terrorists a clear cut date to plan an organized offensive when American presence would be at its weakest. Other more extreme voices in America and abroad have called for the immediate removal of U.S. troops, using words such as "occupiers," "crusaders," "infidels," etc.
(08/23/05 9:00am)
There is a long-standing debate as to whether the black civil rights movement and the gay rights movement are related. While there are unquestionable differences, one undisputed parallel has yet to be highlighted; there is a current discussion within the Democratic Party as to whether supporting gay rights is politically viable, just as there was a similar discussion about supporting the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (not to mention, acceptance of interracial marriage). The argument can be made (and heavily defended) that the Democratic stronghold in the South began to crumble due to the Democratic Party's embrace of civil rights. This erosion of support for Democrats, with the South now a major base of the Republican Party, can be looked at as a political disaster for the Democrats. Yet no one questions whether the promotion of civil rights was the right thing to do.