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.
42 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(01/13/03 11:00am)
As former United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights, Mary Robinson has witnessed the far-reaching effects of globalization on the developing and transitional nations of the world. She spoke yesterday on the ethics of globalization, stressing the need for both good governments and responsible private groups in the furthering of human rights.
(11/13/02 11:00am)
A shortage of openings and a long waitlist at the Dartmouth College Child Care Center prompted the Board of Trustees to grant funds for the expansion of the center during their meeting last weekend.
(11/08/02 11:00am)
A recent ruling by the New Hampshire Supreme Court in a case involving Dartmouth may limit the privacy rights of students attending private colleges and universities, according to Robert DeKoven, a professor at California Western School of Law.
(11/05/02 11:00am)
When a visitor enters Michael Vatis' office at the Institute of Security Technology Studies, he reflexively scans his desk for red-bordered documents -- the government's standard indicator of classified information. While these documents are safely secured, two framed pictures stand out: the first, a Matisse print, the second, a photograph of the Department of Defense.
(11/04/02 11:00am)
In the first event of the Dartmouth-Tuck Forum on the International Economy, renowned economic analyst Alan Wolff spoke Friday about international trade policies, calling for a re-evaluation of our trade policies in a post-Sept. 11 world.
(11/01/02 11:00am)
Homecoming weekend at Dartmouth is an exciting time for traditions such as the bonfire and the freshman sweep, but underclassmen are not the only ones who converge on the Green to revel in school spirit. Every year tents to receive individual classes of alumni pop up around Hanover, welcoming back alums arriving to reconnect with their Dartmouth days, if only for a weekend.
(10/30/02 11:00am)
In the wake of the College's recent announcement that 30 administrative jobs could be eliminated, some staff are circulating a proposal that Dartmouth faculty and employees "voluntarily rebate one percent of their gross salary" to the College in order to prevent layoffs.
(10/16/02 9:00am)
Librarian of the College Richard Lucier addressed all library employees yesterday morning and the Student Assembly last evening to clarify the impact of the $1 million budget cuts that the library must make over the next two fiscal years.
(10/11/02 9:00am)
College administrators are reportedly considering closing Sanborn Library, ending the independence of Sherman Art Library and eliminating six staff positions to deal with budget cuts imposed in the face of the current economic downturn.
(10/09/02 9:00am)
In the middle of February in 2001, a female student happened to be walking by Psi Upsilon fraternity.
(09/26/02 9:00am)
The reactivation of a 10-year-old policy granting office space in Robinson Hall to student organizations based on an annual application has granted offices to 19 groups previously without space, leaving others cramped or without offices.
(08/19/02 9:00am)
As people seek more information on financial markets and news events from the Internet, the heightened risk of web defacement threatens to lead them to make ill-advised decisions, according to Thayer School of Engineering Professor George Cybenko.
(08/09/02 9:00am)
When Karima Rizk '03 returned to Dartmouth after taking medical leave, she returned as a mother of a three-month-old son.
(08/01/02 9:00am)
After writing an article for the July issue of "Esquire" magazine, Ron Suskind became the target of a White House effort to discredit his character.
(07/24/02 9:00am)
The contemporary movement for reparations over slavery and the exploitation of African Americans is too often thought of as being only about money, said Professor Robin D.G. Kelley in a Montgomery Fellowship lecture yesterday afternoon.
(07/24/02 9:00am)
For Professor Robin D.G. Kelley, scholarship is not about accolades. To him the study of the conditions and lives of the working class is about envisioning a different future.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
Friends of Matthew Demaine '04, who unexpectedly died of cardiac arrest in his sleep last year, say that he was a talented artist who took his work very seriously, as is readily apparent from viewing a sample of his work currently on display at the Hopkins Center.
(07/02/02 9:00am)
The Pledge of Allegiance was declared unconstitutional in violation of the Establishment Clause by the largest Federal Appeals Court in the nation last week, yet there is doubt the decision will stand up to further appeals.
(06/28/02 9:00am)
For Laurie Anderson, reinvention is an inevitable -- if discomforting -- corollary of storytelling.
(06/28/02 9:00am)
The Hitchcock residence hall and housing in Massachusetts Row and the Gold Coast became the first dormitories to utilize the new electronic security system this past week. The system will be implemented across campus at the beginning of next term.