Alumni sue over Initiative
The New Hampshire Supreme Court recently agreed to review and possibly revive a previously dismissed lawsuit regarding the Student Life Initiative brought against the College by a group of seven alumni.
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The New Hampshire Supreme Court recently agreed to review and possibly revive a previously dismissed lawsuit regarding the Student Life Initiative brought against the College by a group of seven alumni.
With "brains in their head[s]" and "feet in their shoe[s]," the graduating Class of 2001 will be presented today with the proverbial Seussian expanse of limitless opportunities for the future. But what might this future hold for the first graduating class of the new millennium?
The members of the Class of 2001 will not be the only degree recipients this June. A former Secretary of State, the discoverer of the double helix and the former chairman of the board of directors for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People will be among those honored in today's Commencement exercises.
Last week the Student Assembly passed a near-unanimous resolution urging the Coed Fraternity Sorority Council to rescind its current ban prohibiting first-year students from attending registered social events at Greek houses during their Fall term.
Easy lay. Special K. Roofies.
Green Key weekend boasts the beloved label of an annual Dartmouth tradition. Each year, students organize and attend social events to revel in the intoxication of things done before and things that will be done for generations of College students to come.
Green Key weekend is unique among big weekends at Dartmouth. As an anticipated springtime tradition, it is the last hurrah of graduating seniors and a chance for freshmen to celebrate the culmination of their first year at Dartmouth.
After an evening of technical difficulties on the Basement student elections website, Molly Stutzman '02 was named the new Student Body president and Michael Newton '04 the new Student Body vice president, as predicted by a recent poll conducted by The Dartmouth.
After two weeks of rigorous campaigning, the online voting process for candidates vying for student leadership positions begins today.
As annual elections enter their final week, student body presidential and vice presidential candidates came together last night to discuss their ideas for the upcoming year.
Molly Stutzman '02 is the clear favorite in the Student Assembly presidential election this year, while Michael Newton '04 is leading a close vice-presidential race, according to a poll conducted by The Dartmouth this weekend.
Although campaign posters for the upcoming student elections currently pepper the entire campus, at this time last year even the official campaign bulletin board in Collis Student Center remained empty.
An open letter to the Board of Trustees and College President James Wright signed by 101 faculty members released early today urges the College to revisit the issue of radically reforming or abolishing the Greek system.
Renee Tajima-Pena, director of tonight's Hopkins Center featured documentary "My America (...or Honk if You Love Buddha)" said that rather than attempting to create a specific message with her work, she hopes that the film will encourage viewers to think critically about both sides of a controversial issue.
Star Parker's speech "Pimps, Whores and Welfare Brats: The Stunning Transformation of a Former Welfare Queen" sparked heated debate from a crowd of nearly one hundred students yesterday evening.
Three students were expelled from the College over the past year, 14 were suspended, 72 received college discipline, and a little less than 300 others received official reprimands or warnings.
Christiana Usenza, girlfriend of one of the two Chelsea teenagers charged for the brutal stabbing of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop, told the press yesterday that the last two months have left her with nightmares.
Just over 130 candidates have mustered up the courage to put their names on the ballot for student elections this May 9th and 10th.
The abrupt end to the celebrated dotcom honeymoon has left many former computer and technology enthusiasts disillusioned, and some graduating Computer Science majors are reevaluating their priorities.
Both College President James Wright and Dean of the College James Larimore said they were very disappointed in Zeta Psi fraternity's publication of weekly "sex papers" and sources close to the investigation say derecognition remains a possible conclusion to the controversy.