Sigma Nu fraternity house is vandalized
According to members of Sigma Nu fraternity, a vandal or group of vandals illegally entered the fraternity house and spray-painted offensive words on the basement walls early Thursday morning.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
151 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
According to members of Sigma Nu fraternity, a vandal or group of vandals illegally entered the fraternity house and spray-painted offensive words on the basement walls early Thursday morning.
The Student Assembly last night elected Unai Montes-Irueste '98 to fill a vacancy on its influential Membership and Internal Affairs Committee.
Johnetta Cole, the College's Montgomery Fellow during the month of May, has served as the first African-American woman president of Spelman College and has published several books about cultural anthropology, but she said she still has a lot to learn from Dartmouth students about life in Hanover.
Two additional students, Abigail Gordon '98 and Arvidas Remeza '98 have been named Fulbright Scholars for the upcoming academic year. They will conduct research in Spain and Lithuania respectively.
There will be a lot of moving and shaking out on the Green in the coming weeks to get it back in shape for spring after wear and tear from the last two terms.
The Student Assembly passed a constitutional amendment last night which prohibits its Membership and Internal Affairs Committee from denying membership to representatives from student organizations.
With a green Dartmouth banner floating in the weightless background, Medical School Professor Jay Buckey spoke to students Saturday in a 10-minute teleconference from on board the Space Shuttle Columbia.
This week, the College recognized its newest Greek organization, La Unidad Latina Lambda Upsilon Lambda fraternity. Currently consisting of only four members, LUL is the College's first a historically Latino fraternity.
The Student Assembly passed a joint resolution with the class councils last night calling for the Director of Computing Services Lawrence Levine to rescind the new printing policies at Kiewit Center.
Assistant Anthropology Professor Paul Goldstein has been awarded two Fulbright grants for the upcoming academic year to conduct research in Peru.
It all started with the enormous success of Bill Bennett's "Book of Virtue" -- the notion that children's literature can be written and marketed for more advanced readers.
Josh Green '00 emerged as the landslide winner in the race for Student Assembly president last night, gathering 53.9 percent of the votes, more than three times as many as his nearest competitor. But voter turnout -- with just 1,259 votes cast -- was the lowest since 1989.
Kwang Kim '98 and Justin Stearns '98 have been named Fulbright Scholars for the 1998-99 academic year and will be traveling to Korea and Morocco respectively to teach and conduct research.
At its meeting last night, the Student Assembly updated the Visions project, passed two constitutional amendments regarding executive offices and failed to gather the necessary votes to approve a third.
Engineering Professor Erland Schulson, director of the College's Ice Research Laboratory, won a Fulbright scholarship for the 1998-99 academic year.
Win Johnson '67 is an alumnus of the College, the advisor to Chi Heorot fraternity and someone who raises sheep and cattle in his spare time. And on June 15, he will also be the College's acting vice president and treasurer.
Construction of the new Moore Psychology building remains on schedule and is still expected to be completed by June 1999.
At last night's meeting, the Student Assembly elected two new members to its Membership and Internal Affairs Committee, partially approved a change to its constitution, making it easier for representatives of student organizations to gain membership, and passed two funding resolutions.
During the open forum after last night's Student Assembly's meeting, members commented on James Wright's recent appointment as the next president of the College:
Students and faculty members who print documents at the Kiewit Computation Center's public print cluster will no longer be able to fetch their collated papers immediately after they print. Instead, Kiewit employees will only sort and file printouts into the alphabetical bins once every half hour.