Berry evacuated after gas leak
Hanover emergency crews surrounded Berry Library last Friday night after a leaking propane tank near the now demolished Kiewit Computation Center caused the evacuation of the area.
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Hanover emergency crews surrounded Berry Library last Friday night after a leaking propane tank near the now demolished Kiewit Computation Center caused the evacuation of the area.
Rounding off a busy fundraising campaign for the Upper Valley United Way, Green Key Society and Golden Key Society leaders have organized a January 18th benefit concert and raffle.
For the first time, the Office of Residential Life's funding proposal was rejected this year by the Undergraduate Finance Committee.
Looking beyond the lecture seats of Dartmouth Hall, William Jewett Tucker, Dartmouth's ninth president, saw the aims of the College as more than merely intellectual.
As students make travel plans for the Thanksgiving holiday, changes in the Dartmouth Coach's scheduling and pricing, as well special shuttles coordinated by the Student Assembly, promise to make the trip home a little smoother.
If the Russians could sneak their votes into the Palm Beach County ballot boxes, Bush would snag the lead, according to Thomas Graham, Jr.
From the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to scheming Japanese businessmen in Michael Crichton's "Rising Sun," a negative light has often been cast on Asians in America.
Even on election day, the campaign isn't over and local Al Gore, George W. Bush, and Ralph Nader supporters are still drumming up votes for their favorite candidates.
As the '04s put the final touches on their bonfire and alumni flock back for the football game, many might be surprised to learn that few schools have homecoming festivities as popular or elaborate as Dartmouth.
Dartmouth's new Humanities Center held its inaugural event -- a Symposium on The Global Humanities -- this past weekend. The symposium brought to campus new points of view on the humanities and a commitment to undergraduate involvement in the Center.
A day after a cease-fire reduced turmoil in the Middle East to scattered incidents of violence, a discussion led by Dartmouth history professor Ronald Edsforth was unable to endorse any single solution to the conflict.
Elected last Wednesday, 2004 Class Council President Frederica Ghesquiere is already excitedly planning to "pour heart and soul" into energizing Dartmouth's newest arrivals.
With antique light fixtures from the 1860s, marble-top Victorian-style tables and a woven rug from the days of early American industrialization, Jim Prager is one who cherishes everything old.
Stuart Lord, newly appointed dean of the Tucker Foundation and associate provost, had always thought he would become a pastor.
The Summer term began with an announcement that would affect many more classes than just that of 2002, in residence for their Sophomore Summer.
Dartmouth received a record number of gifts over the past year, with donations from individuals, foundations and corporations totaling $116 million.
Experts in Russian politics, law, and international business gathered Saturday morning in the Rockefeller Center to discuss the past, present and future of business in Russia.
A 22-foot inflatable slide, a foam dance and a multathalon will be just a few of the activities at this weekend's Summer Carnival -- an annual event organized by the Programming Board.
The Pow-Wow, the South-Asian students' culture night and the Dartmouth Asian Organization Harvest Festival all have one thing in common. They are all social and educational programming events hosted by campus cultural and minority groups for the entire Dartmouth community.
Opening tonight at The Moore Theatre, Richard Dresser's "Something in the Air" is a dark comedy with a mysterious aura, according to the play's Lighting Designer Colin Bills '98.