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Five hours every day. That's how long the offices on the second floor of Robinson Hall are quiet when The Dartmouth is in production.
The selection of David T. McLaughlin '54 as the 14th president of the College came at a special Feb. 23, 1981 faculty meeting after a weekend of secret trustee deliberations in Hanover and Boston. Only hours later, the College's professors began to question the businessman's academic qualifications -- the first signs of a problem that would last throughout his tumultuous six-and-one-half-year tenure.
Nathan's Garden, a quiet, spacious park at the intersection of Maple Street and Downing Road, may play host to more than an occasional birdwatcher this weekend.
Former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean sat down with The Dartmouth on Aug. 5 to discuss the upcoming presidential race, the state of the American left and his own personal plans for the future.
Dartmouth College netted a record-breaking $118.1 million in charitable gifts in the fiscal year ending June 30, topping last year's contributions by almost one-third, College officials announced Tuesday. The largest single gifts will endow the Neukom Institute for Computational Science and new construction at the Thayer School of Engineering.
Since the implementation of the Dartmouth Plan some 30 years ago, the vast majority of sophomores at the College have spent their summers in Hanover, enjoying what many regard as the least challenging term at Dartmouth. Each summer, however, a few second-year students decide to skip town -- somewhat less than five percent of the sophomore class, Registrar Polly Griffin estimated.
Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean offered his thoughts on campaigning and policy issues in the first of several planned summer visits to the College on Tuesday. Dean -- who carried Hanover in January's New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary -- spoke in two forums and two classes. He also taped a segment for the political commentary show "Hardball" in the 1930s Room of the Rockefeller Center.
A few short days after his commencement, Michael Curley '04 will leave Hanover behind for Washington, D.C., and a job at a real estate consulting firm.
Next fall, Tsering Kheyap '04 is going back to middle school -- only this time she won't have to worry about acne, angst or social acceptance. Kheyap plans to teach social studies at a secondary school in the Bay Area through a fellowship from Teach for America.
As the nation's economy rallies and business confidence continues to grow, this year's graduating class will leave Dartmouth with substantially rosier prospects for the future than College alumni of the past several years.
Ralph Davies '05 will not appeal the results of this week's election for Student Body President, despite losing to President-elect Julia Hildreth '05 by a single vote in a controversial and hard-fought election, Davies told The Dartmouth yesterday.
Election officials upheld sanctions on the campaign of Julia Hildreth '05 at a meeting Tuesday night in the latest twist in a tumultuous and controversial race for student body president.
In a scandal that may rock Dartmouth's neck-and-neck race for Student Body President, a close friend of candidate Julia Hildreth '05 has alleged a BlitzMail hacker broke into her account and sent fake endorsement messages for Hildreth to much of the College's senior class.
UPDATED May 4, 11:47 a.m.
Dartmouth students frustrated by high textbook prices and deficient buyback policies may have an alternative to the College's traditional book merchants in the future.
The College's computer science faculty may focus primarily on issues in cyberspace, but in recent years, the department has found itself badly in need of office space, too.
Sororities in the Panhellenic Council will likely reject a proposal by the administration to move rush to the fifth week of sophomore fall, Greek leaders said on Tuesday night. Fraternity leaders, describing the general fraternity reaction as "mixed," said they will investigate the proposal in the coming weeks.
College administrators would sanction moving Greek rush to the fifth week of sophomore fall, Dean of the College James Larimore announced at a dinner for fraternity and sorority leaders on Monday night. Larimore said such a change, contingent on Greek officers' willingness to address "specific parameters" in the Greek system, could happen as early as next Fall term.
Lebanon Police filed seven separate charges against Todd Dubois of Deerfield, N.H., in the wake of a severe crash that put three drivers in the hospital on Monday. Dubois remained at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center on Tuesday, and hospital officials listed his medical condition as "fair."
A Ford Explorer pursued by the Lebanon Police caused a dramatic three-car accident on Route 120 Monday. The accident occurred in front of the Go-Go Mart in Hanover at approximately 2 p.m. on Monday, according to police reports.