Sex series highlights Valentine's Day
The Women's Resource Center is sponsoring a series of events this week, including its annual reading of "The Vagina Monologues" on Valentine's Day, this Wednesday.
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The Women's Resource Center is sponsoring a series of events this week, including its annual reading of "The Vagina Monologues" on Valentine's Day, this Wednesday.
Safety and Security fielded more complaints this weekend than they have during other recent Winter Carnival weekends, according to College Proctor Robert McEwen.
Richard Tafel, founder of the controversial political action committee, the Log Cabin Republicans, will speak today at Collis Commonground at 8 p.m.
Robin Becker will read her poetry at Dartmouth today, including from her latest work, "The Horse Fair," at 4 p.m. in the Wren Room in Sanborn Library.
The bad news is gay and lesbian dating at Dartmouth closely resembles that at colleges ranked among the worst for gays. The good news is that some people think things are getting better.
Rashid Khalidi, professor of history and Near East Studies and Director of the Center for International Studies at the University of Chicago, spoke last night on "The Middle East Peace Process: What Went Wrong?" to 180 people in 28 Silsby Hall last night.
The Coed Council announced new elected leadership last Thursday, naming Phi Tau coeducational fraternity's Fred Hurley '01 as the president.
A study by the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center found that tobacco's top brands still appear in popular movies, even after a voluntary ban on such product placement by the tobacco industry.
Fall term was marked by architectural changes, a test run of freshman-only housing, disputed national elections and even controversy over one of Dartmouth's most revered traditions, the Homecoming bonfire.
More than a decade after rushing the football field during the Homecoming game was banned, students continue to test the limits of College policy, running onto the field despite the threat of arrest, fines, probation and a permanent criminal record.
The Novack Caf opened yesterday in Berry Library, drawing a large crowd desperate for a snack bar in a convenient location.
While Poison Ivy, advertised as "Dartmouth's premier night club," has been open since Oct. 6, many students interviewed by The Dartmouth still have not visited the club and do not know much about it.
The frenzied tone of last year's primaries has given way to a quieter, less enthusiastic campus attitude toward the upcoming general election, perhaps a reflection of the presidential candidates themselves.
A large and lively crowd of just under a hundred watching in the Rockefeller Center largely agreed that Vice President Al Gore controlled the debate better than his opponent, Texas Governor George W. Bush, in last night's first presidential debate.
Bob Gienko '01 officially announced his candidacy for the New Hampshire state legislature at a small gathering at Everything But Anchovies on Saturday.