Students discuss lack of campus social space
Students met at Psi Upsilon fraternity last night to discuss their experiences with and opinions about affinity housing and the College's policies regarding different social spaces on campus.
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.
120 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Students met at Psi Upsilon fraternity last night to discuss their experiences with and opinions about affinity housing and the College's policies regarding different social spaces on campus.
Kirsten Doolittle '96, a sexual abuse peer adviser, called for the elimination of the Greek system and the expulsion of rapists from the College at a panel discussion last night.
Although his animated film won no awards, judges at an international animated film competition in Germany last week told Chris Miller '97 that his work had unofficially placed among their 20 favorite animated films.
The Coed Fraternity Sorority Council voted unanimously to adopt a revised purpose statement, in addition to outlining plans for a new advisory committee, at its meeting Tuesday.
Former New York Met Art Shamsky said major league owners were to blame for the recent decline of baseball's popularity in a speech he gave yesterday as part of the week-long Senior Symposium.
The state of Vermont has negotiated a deal with Amtrak to continue to fund the Vermonter train for a second year, despite Amtrak's predicted maintenance cost increases.
Jennifer Williams '85 was recently named director of the Dartmouth Alumni Fund, according to director of Development Publications John DeGange. Williams will be the first female graduate of the College to fill this position.
"Creative Video," a course offered through the film studies department as part of a national project that examines the issue of diversity on campus through documentaries, met for the first time yesterday.
Janice Monk, executive director of the Southwest Institute for Research on Women, said yesterday that specific geographic locations help women find their identities.
College Provost Lee Bollinger said it would be difficult to make new rules that governed hate speech on campus fairly, before about 100 students in yesterday's panel discussion about hate speech.
In his keynote address for the College's celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day yesterday, Stanford University History Professor Clayborne Carson said King should be honored as a leader whose message still has relevance today-- not as an outdated historical figure.
Jess Russo '97 was elected the new president of the Panhellenic Council Thursday night and Marcie Handler '97 was elected vice president.
Students reacted with shock and disappointment to news that cartoonist Bill Watterson will end the popular comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes" on Dec. 31.
Sociology Professor Steven Cornish said last night that the Republican party is misguided in its attempts to cut welfare programs.
Lisa Tiger, a Native American educator and women's activist, said in a speech Wednesday that building self-esteem and avoiding the perils of alcohol are essential to the fight against AIDS.
Students looking for political discussion no longer have to search high and low to find it -- they only have to flip their radio dial to 1340 WDCR, the College's AM radio station, to listen to "Dartmouth Dialectic."
Jewish administrators and students at the College expressed shock and dismay yesterday about the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services Victor Zonana '75 said in a speech last night that the College has undergone a "profound transformation" it its treatment of gays, lesbians and bisexuals.
The College has only raised about half of the $10 million it needs to convert Webster Hall into a Special Collections library, leaving Webster's immediate future in limbo and potentially delaying the proposed expansion of Baker Library.
Contrary to popular belief, Andy Williams '90 does not have the ability to arrange blind dates with the stars of NBC's hit sitcom "Friends."