Career Services plans move to new Main Street offices
Career Services is moving from its current location on the third floor of the Collis Center to the second floor of 63 S. Main Street in downtown Hanover, just above Fleet Bank.
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Career Services is moving from its current location on the third floor of the Collis Center to the second floor of 63 S. Main Street in downtown Hanover, just above Fleet Bank.
Despite Dartmouth's announcement last month that it is considering laying off employees, the unemployment rate for the Upper Valley remains a fraction of the nationwide rate and new businesses continue to open and thrive.
While small numbers of Dartmouth freshmen continue to rush the field during the annual Homecoming game, the practice appears to have waned considerably since its official prohibition in 1986.
As the college admissions process grows increasingly competitive, students and parents may question whether going to an elite preparatory school might increase their chances of getting into a prestigious college.
Following a general decline in the visibility of the Senior Symposium, Dartmouth will see a considerably scaled-back version of the 23-year-old tradition this winter and spring, according to 2003 Class President Timothy Jason Ortiz.
Despite Dartmouth's recent budget cuts, officials in the College Real Estate office still plan to sell a house located at 1 MacDonald Drive in Hanover on the basis of seniority, rather than trying to sell it at the highest possible cost.
While the Hanover Inn's Take a Professor to Lunch program was cancelled in August due to cuts in Dartmouth's budget, the popular program is scheduled to resume next Monday. Administrators interviewed by The Dartmouth said that students may interpret the story of Take a Professor to Lunch as a sign that students' voices matter in determining what programs must go to the budget cuts.
Members of Dartmouth's Young Democrats always make two sets of signs before any political demonstration.
Controversial Princeton African-American Studies professor Cornel West argued that the "corporatization" of the American university is obstructing freedom of thought last Friday in a conference which addressed concerns that too many colleges are giving mere lip service to issues of diversity.
Widespread rumors of a spike in on-campus sexual assaults have put Dartmouth administrators on alert, although few facts have been established amid a flurry of allegations.
Although the college admissions process has frequently been criticized as being unfair or overly subjective, Jacques Steinberg '88 takes a sympathetic view of this difficult rite of passage in his new book, "The Gatekeepers."
While many colleges have had logistical difficulties complying with a new, computerized federal system for tracking international students and professors, Dartmouth has experienced few problems with the new program.
Tom Allason '02 and David Seidman '04 were arrested earlier this month and released on bail for allegedly manufacturing, selling and possessing false drivers' licenses.
Residents of Epsilon Kappa Theta sorority have been the first students on campus to use phones employing a new technology called VoiceOver IP, which transmits phone calls across the College's Ethernet data networks.
Around 37% of Dartmouth students are members of Greek houses, and about 60% of eligible students eventually opt to join a Greek organization. And, whether or not they eventually join, many students find that the Greek organizations are a popular nighttime social option.
Minority and international students have experiences at Dartmouth that are unique in many ways, and sometimes more difficult. However, several international and cultural organizations exist to both promote this uniqueness and to ease some of the difficulties that minority students experience.
"Dartmouth does have a tremendous ability to develop early on a sense of place for its students," Dean of First-Year Students Gail Zimmerman has said of the College's unique qualities. "It happens here, and it's very special."
While collaborating on this issue, one aspect of Dartmouth in particular was reinforced to us over and over again: Variety. It is astounding how many opportunities Dartmouth College has to offer.
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.
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.