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(05/21/02 9:00am)
Phi Delta Alpha fraternity faces a good chance of being rerecognized next fall, as long as it complies with all guidelines set by the Office of Residential Life, former Phi Delt brothers told the Dartmouth.
(05/20/02 9:00am)
Transcripts of prosecutors' interviews with James Parker released Friday offered disturbing insight into the events and motives leading up to the brutal murders of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop in January 2001.
(05/17/02 9:00am)
As Green Key weekend arrives, with its traditions of drunken revelry and bacchanalian excess, several long-time professors contrasted the reality of life at Dartmouth with what they see as a dated stereotype that ignores the growing diversity of attitudes and behaviors at the College.
(05/16/02 9:00am)
Acting on President Bush's October 2001 directive to step up surveillance of international students studying at U.S. universities, the government announced plans last week for a visa-screening program for international students in this country.
(05/15/02 9:00am)
While Dartmouth's social norms campaign has been designed to reduce binge drinking, other campuses have used social norms campaigns to try to change student attitudes about everything from drug use to study habits to sexual behavior.
(05/15/02 9:00am)
In what some have called a conflict of interest and others have called socially-responsible programming, several major U.S. brewing companies have been funding and organizing alcohol social norms campaigns on college campuses over the past several years.
(05/14/02 9:00am)
Although Dartmouth admitted fewer applicants for the Class of 2006 than it has in past years, a record percentage of these students have accepted Dartmouth's offer of admission and will comprise a slightly smaller but more diverse freshman class than last year.
(05/10/02 9:00am)
Dissatisfied with the traditional, quantitative method of grading, two Dartmouth religion professors are allowing their students to help determine their own grades, pleasing students in their classes but raising eyebrows elsewhere.
(05/08/02 9:00am)
People have told Janos Marton '04 that being Student Body President will look good on his resume, but Marton says he won't capitalize on his political experience anytime soon.
(05/06/02 9:00am)
When Massachusetts State Trooper Walter Combs saw a piece of green metal glinting in the morning sunlight at a Massachusetts truck stop, he instinctively knew he had found the getaway car Robert Tulloch and James Parker used to escape after brutally murdering Dartmouth professors Half and Suzanne Zantop.
(04/26/02 9:00am)
After a heated and lengthy debate in which senators fought passionately about patriotism, the separation of church and state and freedom of speech, the New Hampshire Senate passed a controversial bill last week requiring public schools to set aside time each day for students to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
(04/25/02 9:00am)
Claire Unis '95 grew up feeling comfortable in coed situations. Even now, as a busy doctor completing her residency, she lives with two male roommates. While at Dartmouth, however, she said a Greek-dominated social scene, with its emphasis on brotherhood and sisterhood, struck her as unnatural and stifling, instead of liberating.
(04/24/02 9:00am)
Despite political pressure, the New Hampshire Senate voted last week to reexamine rather than repeal the statewide property tax that funds state schools.
(04/22/02 9:00am)
Although Dartmouth offers a variety of resources for learning-disabled students and professors generally adhere to the College's policy of granting accommodations, students with learning disabilities vary in their opinions of how well Dartmouth has met their needs.
(04/19/02 9:00am)
As part of the United States government's continuing efforts to counter terrorism, an interagency government committee is considering barring international students at American universities from pursuing fields of study that might be applied to developing and producing "weapons of mass destruction."
(04/16/02 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the final article in a series about local landlords who have escaped legal scrutiny of their questionable tactics.
(04/12/02 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the second in a series of articles about local landlords who have escaped legal scrutiny of their questionable tactics.
(04/10/02 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles about local landlords who have escaped legal scrutiny of their questionable tactics.
(04/03/02 10:00am)
Tenure is such an accepted feature of academic life that there often appears to be little question of its inherent value. Beneath the surface, however, considerable debate over the effects tenure can have on the quality of teaching and research frequently takes form.
(04/02/02 10:00am)
There are 550 pieces of white computer paper taped to the northeast wall of the Top of the Hop. They are arranged in an unobtrusive rectangle, and they do not seem to catch the attention of the few dozen students studying there on a quiet Saturday afternoon.