Cook: both parties have no regrets
Political analyst Charles Cook explained yesterday why the Democrats, both the President and members of Congress, have no regrets about last week's elections.
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Political analyst Charles Cook explained yesterday why the Democrats, both the President and members of Congress, have no regrets about last week's elections.
Faculty and other members of the Dartmouth community agreed that Green Key Weekend
Brian Friel's award-winning play "Dancing at Lughnasa" will be performed by a Dartmouth cast on the mainstage for a week, opening tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. in the Moore Theater.
"Welcome to the world of the funkadelic," the keyboardist for the P-Funk All-Stars said last night, taking the stage in Leede Arena. George Clinton, the famed father of funk, monopolized the mike soon after as a crowd of about 1,000 onlookers joined in the hype movement.
Gary Shapiro, the executive director of Conflict Resolution Catalyst, offered an eyewitness' perspective last night on the situation in Bosnia and said the region is far from peaceful.
The Hanover Police Department yesterday arrested a third suspect in conjunction with the Fall term attacks on students near the Hopkins Center. Two more arrests are planned for the near future.
NASA Chief Historian Roger Launius kicked off this year's Senior Symposium last night by telling about 80 people in Collis Common Ground that almost nothing is impossible.
In the first of a series of three lectures on the human condition, Sherman Fairchild Professor in the Humanities and Philosophy Department Chair Robert Fogelin examined whether contradictions in our social systems render them useless.
When Jessica Russo '97 was elected president of the Panhellenic Council this winter, she was in the middle of her off-term here in Hanover after participating in a Fall term exchange program .
Critically acclaimed French film director Bertrand Tavernier will visit the College this Friday for three days as a Montgomery Fellow.
English Professor Martin Favor told 13 students it is difficult to define "black culture," in a discussion last night in Casque and Gauntlet senior society's library.
The College's Sexual Abuse and Sexual Harassment committee, created in 1987, is working to strengthen its relationship with students and to address a more varied list of concerns.
A panel of Dartmouth administrators and faculty members that discussed the positive and negative aspects of affirmative action and its impact on Asian-Americans provoked a heated discussion last night
About 1,500 fans sat down to the acoustic artistry of the famed Dave Matthews on tour with guitarist Tim Reynolds last night in Leede Arena. Two men -- one seated, one standing -- two guitars, a lamp atop a small table and a black backdrop made a powerful spectacle.
Music Professor Sally Pinkas, the Hopkins Center's pianist-in-residence, has been bridging the academic and performance aspects of piano at the College since 1985.
The 87th annual College Winter Carnival, a celebration titled, "'Round the Girdled Earth They Roamed: A Prehistoric Carnival," kicked off last night with the opening ceremonies, which included performances, speeches and fireworks.
Dean of the College Lee Pelton has created an ad hoc committee to review the way the College's community members resolve conflicts amongst themselves.
The Hood Museum of Art houses approximately 60,000 significant pieces of art that are not displayed in its galleries, a hidden collection that began in the late 18th century.
A new and improved ski patrol has been protecting the lives of skiers up and down the slopes of the Dartmouth Skiway.
The Office of Residential Life recommended the College consider constructing a new 125 to 225-bed residential facility and requiring sophomores to live on-campus, in a report released yesterday.