By The Numbers
7 —The number of campus housing locations that are gender-inclusive.
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7 —The number of campus housing locations that are gender-inclusive.
What’s the most startling change you’ve witnessed since arriving on campus?
Lately I have surveyed campus with an extra jiggle in my step. I have ignored a bit more cheerfully than usual the humming of the paper shredders in Baker-Berry as scores of readers gather to destroy every print edition of this column they can find. Certainly, my readers have become writers — of hate mail — but nothing can tamp down your Mirror Editor. Not this week.
59, 25 — The percent of members of the Class of 2015 and Class of 2018 respectively who have been in love at Dartmouth.
What’s the most romantic spot in Hanover?
12 - The number of principles, including “observe and interact” and “design from patterns to details,” invoked by permaculture advocates.
But this winter is cold. Is global warming still real?
235 - The age of campus’s oldest building, the Webster Cottage.
You can become attached to a place very quickly. I endured quite a bit of abuse from friends about how often I studied in the 1902 room during my early terms at the College — and I’ll admit that I still like the place today. The room’s grime and vague stench of despair can really get the neurons firing. I have produced my strongest writing (not this column) in that space. If you think about it carefully, it’s hard to deny how essential spaces and buildings are to shaping an experience. I’m excited to publish a magazine that makes the case for architecture as a crucial element of campus life. As I wrestled with this Editor’s Note, I was reminded that there are many ways to write a bad sentence about architecture. I could’ve written something about how architecture is “inscribed in the soul,” or “makes the heart sing” or “inspires deep-seated joy.” Icky. Considering that this Note will be read by the legions of Mirror readers from coast to coast has certainly forced me to tone down my writing. Score one for personal growth. Also score one for my editors who have to try to decipher these Notes each week and pretend to be amused. There is one key difference between my editors and you, dear reader. Even though they may think it, my editors can’t get away with calling this Note “complete trash” or “boring as hell” to my face because they need to work with me each week. But I have hardly made it into Collis this term without being forced to dodge a barrage of the last week’s crumpled-up Editor’s Notes chucked at my face by hordes of jeering students. Perhaps those students are simply clamoring for an updated Editor’s Note photo. ‘Who is that svelte and sultry man-child,’ some readers are wondering. ‘And why is the photo above his Notes from the spring?’ I take my readers’ inquiries very seriously. Unfortunately, however, updating the photo that comes alongside this Note is the only reader demand that this diligent Mirror editor will never be able to satisfy. To those of you who want to know what I look like today in 2015, I say this: I am capable of being photogenic approximately once every 13 months, so you will have to make due with Charlie circa spring 2014. To my online readers, who do not see a photo adjacent to this column, I can only apologize for a paragraph that made no sense. Here’s hoping this issue on architecture becomes inscribed in your soul, makes your heart sing, inspires deep-seated joy, etc.
Hey Mirror readers,
Am I going to get into the FSP of my dreams?
535 -Students enrolled in an off-campus program in 2012-2013, the last year data is available.
Hello, Mirror readers!
Answers to questions you were too afraid to ask.
We do the math so you don’t have to.
Interim Dean of the College Inge-Lise Ameer is responsible for overseeing all aspects of student life — including mental health. In an interview in her Parkhurst Office, she discussed the D-plan, Dick’s House and medical leave.
Computer science professor Andrew Campbell developed the StudentLife app, which tracks students’ mental health, academic performance and behavioral trends. In the spring of 2013, Campbell used the app to measure the ups and downs of 48 of his computer science students’ terms.
It was Green Key weekend, known for outdoor concerts, day drinking and revelry. But several fraternities had another goal in mind: raising money for the Upper Valley Haven, an organization based in White River Junction that provides shelter, food and clothing to those in need. With an ankle-level round horizontal net and a number of balls, 32 teams competed in the first annual Green Key Spikeball Tournament — ultimately donating more than $1,000 to the local shelter.
When Timothy Flanigan ’79called Hanover home as an undergraduate, he and a group of friends at Aquinas House, Dartmouth’s Catholic student center, drove to the Bronx to meet Mother Teresa. Flanigan said her words and history inspired him — not simply because she was generous, but also because she was courageous in helping others, no matter the danger.
3 Guys Basement Barbecue, Hanover's solebarbecue restaurant and catering service,closed after not meeting its goals of high revenues and continuous growth, owner Nigel Leeming said. Some staff have transferred to Murphy's, which Leeming also owns.