Triumphant dragon reigned over opening ceremonies
St. George had fallen and the dragon was perched atop his coffin, but the Winter Carnival opening ceremonies were still held last night on the Green.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
88 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
St. George had fallen and the dragon was perched atop his coffin, but the Winter Carnival opening ceremonies were still held last night on the Green.
Alpha Chi Alpha and Alpha Delta fraternities are currently under indictment for allegedly serving alcohol to minors in two separate incidents.
After 10 years as Jewish Chaplain to Dartmouth and the Upper Valley, Rabbi Daniel Siegel has announced he will resign.
Recent years have seen a splurge in the amount of works by English playwright William Shakespeare being made into film. From "Hamlet" to last year's "Romeo and Juliet," there seems to be no end to the number of times the Bard is rewritten for the silver screen.
The Committee of Chairs voted unanimously to adopt a new engineering-physics major, which will go into effect next fall, and discussed grade inflation at its meeting yesterday afternoon.
Dean of Residential Life Mary Turco and her student intern Yun Chung '97 are in the process of organizing a student committee to improve residential life at the College.
A search committee looking for a director for the John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding has narrowed down its list of candidates to six and hopes to announce the new director by the end of the term.
Though many students fail to realize it, the nondescript building they pass on the way to Dick's House or Occom Pond is a depository for some of the most interesting artifacts from the College's history.