After primary, students take rest
In the aftermath of Tuesday's New Hampshire presidential primary, many student campaigners are breathing a sigh of relief as the excitement winds down.
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In the aftermath of Tuesday's New Hampshire presidential primary, many student campaigners are breathing a sigh of relief as the excitement winds down.
Hanover High School was abuzz today for 12 long hours as campaign workers made last-minute efforts to sway voters heading into the polls.
As the New Hampshire Democratic primary race heats up, Republicans are out trying to make themselves heard above the din.
As local temperatures plunge ruthlessly below zero, most residents scurry indoors, taking comfort wherever possible to avoid the biting cold.
By Jenn Buck
Looking out a bay door in a CH-53 Super Stallion chopper, high above the Afghan desert where you're about to fight for your life, your college education may not mean much.
Is there a place in an institution as old and venerable as Dartmouth for the academic discussion of pornography?
Tucked away in Parker House on the north side of campus exists an organization that grapples with problems ranging from bio-ethics to professional behavior.
A traumatic episode came to a close late last week for would-be mascot Keggy the Keg, when staffers of Jack-o-Lantern humor magazine recovered the missing costume.
A unique new study done at Dartmouth sheds light on the mental energy exhausted in interracial interactions.
Dartmouth College opened its doors to women in 1972, and has graduated thousands of women since. The Dartmouth talked to three College women to try to gain an understanding of what life is like for them as women of Dartmouth. Tsering Kheyap '04, Kiva Wilson '04 and Emilie Fetscher '03, Thayer '04, all shared their individual experiences.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court made history yesterday morning, issuing a 4-3 decision in favor of striking down a ban on gay marriage.
Their news coverage has been accused of inciting violence against U.S. troops in Iraq; their reporters thrown in jail for "supporting and financing" the Al-Qaida terrorist network; and their stations have been bombed repeatedly by the U.S. government.
When do divorcing heterosexuals and gay-marriage activists have something in common?
In the wake of the most recent military conflict on Iraqi soil, cautious civilians carry assault rifles and regard each other with concern. A driver packing a Russian-made automatic weapon may fire at his neighbor over an argument at a stoplight. And for Dartmouth religion professor Kevin Reinhart, that risk had to be weighed every morning of the three months last summer he spent in the Iraqi city of Karbala.
It's easy for Dartmouth students, sheltered in their cozy little community, to feel unaffected by the world outside Hanover.
Leigh Heeter '04 wants to ignore race, religion and politics.
This year, the United Way of the Upper Valley anticipates reaching out to more than 23,000 people in the area by providing housing, healthcare, family and other critical services. Dartmouth itself aims to provide a healthy 20 percent -- the College's annual average -- of the funding needed to run these much-needed non-profit services.