Black out over Green Key
The 73rd Green Key Weekend at the College was interrupted for more than an hour Saturday because of a power loss that shut down electricity throughout most of the campus.
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The 73rd Green Key Weekend at the College was interrupted for more than an hour Saturday because of a power loss that shut down electricity throughout most of the campus.
When students formed the Green Key Society in 1921, it was intended to be a community service centered organization. Seventy-three years later, the spring weekend with the society's namesake is just an excuse to party.
College President James Freedman yesterday appointed Colin Blaydon, a former dean of the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration, as interim Tuck dean.
Timothy O'Leary '97, who received national press for exposing himself to gain 100 points in a scavenger hunt, earned himself a police citation and arraignment date, but his team would have won the competition even without those points.
A new Student Assembly committee on housing will examine the quantity, distribution and organization of the College's dormitories.
Next year's Student Assembly, headed by President-elect Danielle Moore '95 and Vice President-elect Rukmini Sichitiu '95, met for the first time Friday night and elected its officers and nominations committee.
The Student Assembly is planning a speaker series for the end of the month to focus on the Holocaust.
To recognize the fifth anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre in Beijing, the College is hosting a three-day conference that begins today called "The Future of Democracy in China."
Less than six weeks away from Commencement, the College has yet to announce the Commencement speaker.
Around 2,000 freshmen parents will visit this weekend to check up on their kids and experience a little bit of Dartmouth for themselves.
Meredith Epstein '97 was elected secretary of the Ivy Council, a discussion-and-action group made up of student government members from the eight Ivy League schools.
They carry manila envelopes and look excited, worried or lost as they trudge around the campus following tour guides. They are the prospective Class of 1998.
In the first Programming Board-sponsored student office hours, conversations between undergraduates and English professors revolved around everything from advice about classes to why female students wear little black dresses.
The College's Board of Trustees' decision to retain the Reserve Officers' Training Corps is similar to recent decisions made by Trustees at Harvard and Princeton Universities to extend the program.
The College released a finalized copy of its north campus expansion plan yesterday, detailing the College's look 20 years from now.
The Panhellenic Council adopted last night a new rush policy that will guarantee all interested women a place in one of Panhell's six sororities starting Fall term.
The Panhellenic Council will vote tonight on four proposed sorority rush processes - including a lottery approach - to find one to implement Fall term.
Nicole Artzer '94 compared her year at the head of the Student Assembly to riding a roller coaster - each time the Assembly looked like it was heading up, it was only to come to a sickening fall.
Danielle Moore '95 will become the first Native American Student Assembly president of the College next year. With Rukmini Sichitiu '95 as vice-president, the two will become the first women team to lead the Assembly.
A campaign manager is not a necessity to run for Student Assembly president, but no candidate can design and plaster the campus with posters and promises to save the Student Assembly all by him or herself.