Quiznos food chain squeezes into Hanover
Quiznos, the national sub chain, will open its doors to hungry Hanover residents early this week in the Hanover Park Building on Lebanon Street.
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Quiznos, the national sub chain, will open its doors to hungry Hanover residents early this week in the Hanover Park Building on Lebanon Street.
Swicker is in charge of three ships that form an expeditionary action group, whose goal is to help mariners on the coast. His ship, which aims to maintain the law in the area, is manned by 370 people.
Freedom of speech advocates claim that the First Amendment was threatened last Tuesday when the U.S. Supreme Court rejected an appeal filed by the editors of a student-run college newspaper against the schools's administrators. The Supreme Court decision upholds the Seventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals' decision to allow administrators to continue censoring public university newspapers throughout the Midwest.
Earth sciences professor Eric Posmentier explained the complexities and uncertainties surrounding global climate change on Wednesday in his lecture entitled "A Climatologist's View of Climate Change -- Facts and Fallacies."
Over one thousand students took part in the Center for Women and Gender's annual sex festival, which began four years ago as part of a week-long V-series. The festival represented both serious and playful sides of sex and aimed to expose students to a wide variety of ideas to enhance their physical relationships.
Students planning to major in biology and government can expect changes in their course selections as these departments revamp their majors to fit the diverse interests of students.
The sculpture will depict cartoon characters Calvin and Hobbes bobsledding down a large, slanted "D". A snow version of the Olympic torch will serve as the spine of the "D," and the inside of the sculpture will honor past and present Olympic athletes.
The Katrina Help organization united with the Rockapellas Thursday night to share the experience of their winter break community service trip to Biloxi, Miss.
Having mixed blood, Yellow Robe said, "has created a psychology that no one has dealt with. People go into this panic of being too native or not being native enough."
Benjamin Bostick, an assistant professor of earth sciences, conducted research at Coakley Landfill in North Hampton, N.H. with four other Dartmouth faculty members to examine how organic compounds in landfills cause arsenic to seep out of the soil and into drinking water. Although the garbage in a landfill may not contain arsenic, there are iron oxides in the soil that do. When these oxides react with microbes in the garbage, arsenic is released into groundwater.
Environmentally-conscious building designers and construction workers are making efforts to ensure that the newest dormitory at the Big Green, the Tuck Mall Residence hall is, well, green.
With so many Dartmouth students conducting the majority of their correspondences over BlitzMail, inboxes have been filling to the 20 megabyte capacity quickly. To deal with this issue, Computer Services has announced that starting Tuesday the storage quota for BlitzMail will be increased to 500 megabytes.
While it may be frustrating to deal with late-night munchies in Hanover, Dartmouth students are lucky to have their dining facilities open later than any other Ivy League school.
Sidney Altman, Nobel Prize winner and Yale University biology professor, emphasized the importance of valuing science in a faith-dominated society during a speech Tuesday in Moore Hall.
In a move designed add flexibility to the biology major and alleviate student concerns, the College's biology department is planning to institute sweeping changes that could take effect as early as next fall.
Homecoming at Dartmouth is a widely anticipated event for many students, but not all colleges share a similar sense of excitement and tradition.
Oliver Sacks, the acclaimed author of "Awakenings" and "The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat," spoke to an enthusiastic crowd in Moore Theater Wednesday.
Montgomery Fellow Rita Colwell touted the importance of global cooperation and interdisciplinary sciences in the fight against cholera during a speech Tuesday in Filene Auditorium.
Although applications for next year's off-campus programs are due in February, some departments are still accepting students to fill free spaces on programs that have faced problems with enrollment.
Children may form their perceptions about alcohol and tobacco use before they ever encounter peer pressure at school, a new Dartmouth Medical School study suggests.