Dining Services delivers here
Beginning Sunday, Food Court will deliver food from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. to all campus locations and students can charge their purchases to a College Identification card.
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Beginning Sunday, Food Court will deliver food from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m. to all campus locations and students can charge their purchases to a College Identification card.
Last week three student publications, The Beacon, The Dartmouth Review and Spare Rib, selected new editors in chief, who will assume their positions next term.
After nearly two years without a health educator or a drug and alcohol specialist, the College recently hired Gabrielle Lucke to fill both positions.
Executive Director of the Lambda Legal Defense Fund Kevin Cathcart urged more than 100 people who attended his lecture in Rockefeller Center yesterday to write to New Hampshire Governor Steve Merrill in support of gay rights legislation.
Students who have long missed out on their favorite Fox network programs will have the opportunity to receive them over satellite beginning next fall.
Cheers and applause resounded throughout the Top of the Hop last night as the College surpassed its goal of $500,000 in the final hours of the annual student telethon, setting a new record for alumni contributions.
Artist in residence Pat Adams is not just any abstractionist; she has utilized geometrics, specifically circles, in a way that evokes such intimate emotion and desire that you are immediately drawn into her intense spherical universe.
A recent College survey of 400 random female students found that 15 percent admitted to having eating disorders, College nutritionist Marcia Herrin said.
A committee formed last term by Dean of the College Lee Pelton to evaluate the financial operation of the Dartmouth Skiway does not indicate its future is in jeopardy, Don Cutter '73, a committee member and Skiway manager, said.
An increase in campus thefts prompted Safety and Security to post a BlitzMail bulletin earlier this month, warning students about the danger of leaving unattended items in College residence halls.
The Studio Art Department has a renowned set of artists on display this month.
The first issue of a new student publication focusing on women's issues was distributed Monday night to fraternities, sororities and affinity houses around campus.
With the white flakes falling, cold weather and more of it expected, students are taking off to local ski slopes in hopes of some good runs before the term's end.
The search for a treatment for breast cancer has led a Dartmouth senior and a professor from the Virgin Islands to Hanover to study marine organisms that preliminary research shows kill cancer cells.
After three years in temporary facilities, the environmental studies department has moved from the Murdough Center to the Steele building.
A Columbia University economist said Thursday that the federal government spends twice as much money on health care than on education.
Internationally renowned lettering artist and stone carver John Benson spoke to about 50 people Thursday about the craft of cutting letters in stone.
Former New York Times correspondent and best-selling author David Shipler '64 said yesterday that conflict between Palestinian Arabs and Israeli Jews is a result of both groups' belief that they are victims.
Rabbi Daniel Siegel will take over as adviser to the Dartmouth Community Mediation Center, replacing Environmental Studies Professor Jack Shepard.