Class of '34 returns for 65th reunion
Sixty-five years have passed since the Class of 1934 was gathered for their own Commencement ceremonies, but 40 members reconvened this weekend for their 65th class reunion.
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Sixty-five years have passed since the Class of 1934 was gathered for their own Commencement ceremonies, but 40 members reconvened this weekend for their 65th class reunion.
The Coed Fraternity and Sorority Council passed last Tuesday the proposal it will submit to the Trustee Steering Committee for the Student Life Initiative - one of the recommedations include a program to slowly phase out alcohol from CFSC houses over a period of five years.
The College is currently involved in a battle for the only Dartmouth professor that teaches courses in Asian American studies - History Professor Vernon Takeshita.
One-hundred years have passed since the College's first spring celebration was planned in 1899. The green of spring after a long New England winter planted the seed for revelry and an opportunity for Dartmouth men to bring women to the campus.
In an election in which candidates' platforms were e-mailed to students late on election eve, not one of the 20 candidates garnered a significant majority on the Board of Trustee's steering committee on the landmark social and residential life yesterday's campus-wide election, leading to a run-off election with the top four candidates tonight and tomorrow.
Senator John McCain (R-Az) -- who last week announced his formal intention to seek candidacy for the Republican Presidential nomination -- focused on Kosovo developments at the Grofton County Republican Convention at the Hanover Inn yesterday.
The Board of Trustees will convene at the College at the end of this week and throughout the weekend for the first time since their surprise announcement in February of the five principles for social and residential change, and indications are the initiative is on the Trustees' agenda.
The College announced today the establishment of a Latino House at 38 North Main Street, the current location of the Office of Public Affairs.
If many observers are correct and implementation of the Board of Trustees' initiative leads to court battles between the College and Greek organizations refusing to sell their houses, the arguments are likely to focus on small number of legal issues.
Although debate over the Board of Trustees' controversial initiative has focused on the future of Dartmouth's Greek houses, it is unclear whether the College's senior societies -- well-known for their selectivity and, in some cases, single-sex compositions -- might also be targeted in the overhaul of Dartmouth's social system.
As members of the Dartmouth community try to imagine what the next few years will be like as the College's social system undergoes what is expected to be a near complete transformation, they may look to a handful of northeastern colleges who also eliminated single-sex Greek systems from their campuses.
Student turnout was surprisingly low at four town meetings organized by the Student Assembly to gather student opinion on the door-locking policy over the past three nights.
New Hampshire Senator Bob Smith -- who announced last month he would campaign for the Republican presidential nomination -- demanded Monday that President Clinton testify during the Senate impeachment hearings.
Students were surprised and puzzled over the charges posed by the Center for Individual Rights that the College's admission policy is acting in violation of affirmative action laws.
After Deputy Peace Corps Director Charles Baquet canceled at the last minute, three former Peace Corps volunteers stepped up to share their experiences in the service organization last night in a community dinner panel at the Roth Center for Jewish Life.
The Undergraduate Finance Committee recently distributed $475,000 in funds for next year to 10 student organizations, and most of the allocations were similar to the amounts UFC groups received last year.
More than 100 years have passed since 1895 when College President William Jewett Tucker introduced Dartmouth Night to the College.
In a surprise announcement yesterday, Acting Dean of the College Dan Nelson revealed that Computing Services and the Office of Residential Life will pay the cost to implement "interim" cable service in residence halls beginning this Winter term at no additional cost to students.
Provost Search Committee Chair Ronald Green said yesterday the committee is in the final stage of deliberations to fill the office of the second highest-ranking administrator of the College.
The number of PC owners in the freshmen class has doubled compared to last year. In addition, 600 of 1,135 freshmen purchased the one-piece blue-tinted iMac recommended by Computing Services.