Economic woes force budget cuts
College President James Wright announced last week that Dartmouth will make budget cuts in response to a significant shortfall in investment return suffered during the 2002 fiscal year.
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College President James Wright announced last week that Dartmouth will make budget cuts in response to a significant shortfall in investment return suffered during the 2002 fiscal year.
The idea that the average person requires eight glasses of water each day to maintain good health has become widely accepted, but one Dartmouth Medical School physician says the advice seems to lack any grounding in science.
Princeton University announced on Tuesday that it would move its director of admissions to another administrative position following revelations that admissions officials had broken into Yale University's admissions Web site in April.
Several Upper Valley residents who have experienced homelessness spoke on the shortage of affordable housing in the region Wednesday evening in Tindle Lounge, shedding light on a problem that seems remote for many Dartmouth students.
Hungry students will gain another late-night eating option this Sunday when Dartmouth Dining Services debuts its new delivery service.
Kelly Cameron '04 was diagnosed with meningococcal meningitis this weekend and taken to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center for treatment, where she was listed in satisfactory condition yesterday.
An individual entered Bones Gate and Sigma Nu fraternities and caused minor damage in each early last week, but Hanover Police say no arrest has yet been made in the case.
The tightly-contested New Hampshire Senate race may be garnering more attention statewide, but the campaign to fill departing Governor Jeanne Shaheen's position promises as close a finish, with no candidate having yet emerged as a clear front-runner.
The founders of the Southern Society -- Dartmouth's newest student organization -- hope their group will provide insight into a culturally distinct and historically important region which they say is poorly understood and given only scant scholarly attention.
As the tightly-contested New Hampshire senatorial race begins to heat up, several Dartmouth students have donated their time to assist candidates in their campaigns.
Most Americans wouldn't regard the Balkan nation of Albania -- among the poorest countries in Europe -- as an alluring place to visit. Not Xander Meise '01.
Christian Hummel '01 hadn't intended to travel to Croatia as part of his Fulbright scholarship, but, as a student with a longstanding interest in the Balkans, was hardly disappointed with the change.
While Dartmouth may not have been an entirely welcoming environment for women in the early days of coeducation, several female students from the 1970s and before remembered their time at the College fondly, with relatively little mention of any tension between the sexes.
College and university classics teachers must maintain better and closer relations with their secondary school counterparts if the field of study is to continue to flourish in coming decades, according to Zeph Stewart, a Professor Emeritus of classics at Harvard.
College Board trustees voted last Thursday to make significant changes to the SAT with the goal of allowing the test to better measure in-class learning, though officials at Dartmouth and elsewhere said the alterations would likely hurt as much as help.
The U.S. Supreme Court yesterday upheld the right of public high schools to randomly test their students for drugs, ending the nearly four-year struggle of Lindsay Earls '05 to see such practices banned.
The unexpected guilty plea of Robert Tulloch dominated the news in an otherwise tranquil Spring term and brought an end to the murder case that began nearly a year and a half ago with the brutal slayings of Half and Susanne Zantop.
Commencement speaker Fred Rogers will be just one of seven individuals slated to receive honorary degrees alongside hundreds of graduating students during today's Commencement ceremonies.
"It's a beautiful day in this neighborhood, a beautiful day for a neighbor. Would you be mine? Could you be mine?" are lines now familiar to two generations of American children.
The 2001-2002 Student Assembly concluded a successful year last night, recognizing members and presenting awards as next year's Assembly, to be headed by Janos Marton '04, continues to take shape.