Alums of The Dartmouth make their mark in journalism
Students frequently see The Dartmouth as a hotbed of controversy, or perhaps a forum for campus issues and little else.
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Students frequently see The Dartmouth as a hotbed of controversy, or perhaps a forum for campus issues and little else.
The United States should act as the world's "sheriff," Richard Haass, director of Foreign Policy Studies at Brookings Insititution in Washington, told a Rockefeller Center audience in a speech last night.
Carnival King Toby, owned by Sarah Harris '00 and Queen Ceiley, owned by Kevan Higgins '00 and the house dog of Bones Gate fraternity, were crowned last night at the Carnival opening ceremonies.
College researchers have been conducting research on Rhesus monkeys for over a year, The Dartmouth learned yesterday.
After Commencement, seniors plan to work, to travel and, yes, some of them are looking forward to even more studying.
Seniors approach graduation with mixed feelings -- while they have enjoyed their time at the College, they are ready for new challenges and experiences.
New York University Law Professor Vicki Been discussed the claim that poor and minority communities are often hosts to hazardous waste sites in a classroom-style lecture yesterday afternoon in the Rockefeller Center.
Even Dartmouth students who do not normally watch Seinfeld will hit the couch for the special finale episode that airs tonight starting at 8 p.m.
With a program of music spanning centuries and continents the Chamber Singers' Spring term "Voices of Freedom" concert highlights music originally written as a protest against oppression.
A 17th-century English Baroque opera with a male soprano?
Prominent economics theorist John Kenneth Galbraith reflected on his ground-breaking 1958 work "The Affluent Society" to an audience of over 150 faculty, students and community members in 105 Dartmouth Hall.
During her third week as a freshman at Rutgers University in New Jersey, Laura Luciano was raped by an acquaintance while she was visiting his dorm room.
Montgomery Fellow Jill Ker Conway, Pulitzer prize-winning author and first woman president of Smith College, spoke yesterday afternoon to a packed audience of over 400 community members and students in Cook Auditorium.
Spring Term Montgomery Fellow Jill Ker Conway, an author and the first woman president of Smith College, said she looks forward to sharing her varied experiences and interests with Dartmouth students and faculty.
History Professor Gene Garthwaite and Visiting Government Professors Bradley Thayer and Sean Kay discussed the impending war in the Gulf in a lunch lecture and discussion titled "To Bomb or Not to Bomb."
Russell Hittinger, chair of Catholic Studies at the University of Tulsa Law School, said yesterday that Americans know little about abortion law, even though 25 years have passed since the Supreme Court's Roe vs. Wade decision.
As the single Dartmouth student on a 14-member Presidential search committee, Erica Ryu '98 represents a lot of opinions.
In response to human rights violations committed by Nike-affiliated companies, students on university campuses nationwide are protesting the ties of their schools with Nike.
When five second-year students at the Amos Tuck School of Business traveled to Southeast Asia to investigate wages paid by Nike-affiliated factories and published a favorable report, many met the overly optimistic conclusions with great surprise.
Harry Wu, a Chinese-American human rights activist and former political prisoner, will be giving a speech exposing Laogai -- forced labor camps in China -- at Dartmouth next Wednesday, and Chinese-American students have mixed reactions.