Religious groups fill spiritual void
Dartmouth boasts numerous religious groups and services that allow students to keep up an active spiritual existence amid the hustle and bustle of everyday campus life.
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Dartmouth boasts numerous religious groups and services that allow students to keep up an active spiritual existence amid the hustle and bustle of everyday campus life.
A new survey conducted by industry icon Kaplan Test Prep has found that the perceived value of an M.B.A. has risen as recent college graduates struggle to find jobs.
The empty building on South Main Street that housed the P&C Food Market for three years will soon be transformed and reopened -- perhaps during Summer term -- according to town and business officials.
During their time at the College, members of the Class of 1952 witnessed the start of the Korean war, the dropping of the first hydrogen bomb and the introduction of color TV.
Government professors Allan Stam and Daryl Press debated the appropriateness of a U.S. invasion of Iraq Thursday night to a packed crowd at the Rockefeller Center.
Sure, everyone knows a few "super seniors," but with 86.2 percents of students graduating in four years, Dartmouth has one of the highest four-year graduation rates in the nation.
Could you give up television, all television, for an entire week? That's the question the Health Awareness Program is asking the Dartmouth community right now.
The debate surrounding the possible creation of an Asian American Studies program continued on Thursday during a discussion aimed at promoting Asian-American issues in an organized forum.
In hopes of raising campus awareness of violence against females, a group of Dartmouth women gathered yesterday to perform Eve Ensler's "The Vagina Monologues" for the third consecutive year.
The tendency to put people into categories based on their race or religion and the segregation that results from such distinctions were the main topics of concern at last night's informal discussion on inter-group dating and marriage.
A recent decision by the Massachusetts Labor Relations Commission granted residential advisors at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst an unprecedented right to unionize, but it appears unlikely that the push for unionization of undergraduate students will spread to Dartmouth anytime soon.
The unexpected promotion of Student Assembly member Joshua Marcuse '04 to the presidency of the Ivy Council set the tone for last night's meeting of the Assembly as Dartmouth's student leaders looked to save the all-Ivy forum.
Over a week after a Smith Hall resident discovered a swastika sketched on her door's message board, investigators have uncovered no new leads in the case.
Carl Burnett '03 is spending an "off" term in Colorado this winter, but he is hardly relaxing -- he's training for the 2002 Winter Paralympic Games, to be held in Salt Lake City, Utah.
Low turnout at a panel discussion last night about the war on terrorism seemed to some participants to be an indicator of the growing apathy amongst Americans toward the issue.
As students prepare to travel home for Thanksgiving, many local families are wondering if they will have food and shelter for the holiday.
Mallory Paine '05 describes himself as "an instant gratification knitter." He sticks to the small things -- hats ("I can make a hat in three hours"), gloves, mittens and socks -- never sweaters.
The tourism-dependent Upper Valley economy will soon be feeling the impact of the Sept. 11 attacks as travelers cancel their plans.