Alum donates $1.5 mil to skiway
The Dartmouth Skiway has received a gift of $1.5 million from Andy McLane '69 and Linda McLane, the first donation in a $4-million campaign to construct a new lodge and improve snowmaking capabilities.
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The Dartmouth Skiway has received a gift of $1.5 million from Andy McLane '69 and Linda McLane, the first donation in a $4-million campaign to construct a new lodge and improve snowmaking capabilities.
On March 17, many Dartmouth students will be recovering from the stress of completing their final papers and exams - but for two students at the College, a different type of stress and adventure will have just begun.
Last week's announcement by the College's Board of Trustees that they would seek changes to the Greek system prompted swift responses at the headquarters of the national fraternities and sororities on campus, where leaders resolved to work together in an effort to maintain their local chapters at the College.
Despite the national media attention devoted to the College's announced changes to the Greek system, the approximately 100 prospective students who toured Dartmouth this weekend have expressed little interest in the issue, according to College tour guides.
About 30 members of the Dartmouth community have decided that Joe Camel is not an appropriate role model for children -- and they're going to do something about it.
While a poster of a dog overlooking Baker Tower is a more light-hearted creation of his to celebrate this year's Winter Carnival, Rael Salley '01 has used art for much of his life as a tool for personal expression and comments on social interaction.
Eighty-three percent of the students who responded to a survey conducted by The Dartmouth yesterday said they favor the continuation of the single-sex Greek system at the College.
Responding to the announcements made by the Board of Trustees and President James Wright to end the Greek system "as we know it," Greek leaders decided in a special meeting last night to cancel all 21 Winter Carnival parties registered for this weekend.
William Neukom '64 was practicing law at a medium-sized firm in Seattle about 20 years ago when the managing partner of the firm told him about his son who was running a two-year-old computer software company in Albuquerque, NM.
When leaders of the historically African-American Greek fraternities and sororities at the College discuss their organizations, they don't emphasize parties, alcohol or the need for short-term social options.
Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Robert Caro discussed Lyndon Johnson's early years, contrasting the former president's compassion with his ability to betray in order to gain power in a speech to a capacity audience at Cook Auditorium yesterday.
Dartmouth seems to be one of those places where people come and just don't leave.
For Michael Moschen, juggling is a lot more than keeping a bunch of objects flying through the air.
Filmmaker Spike Lee will be the keynote speaker during the College's annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Day celebration.
Physics and Astronomy Professor John Kidder died suddenly Saturday evening following a heart attack at his home.
High school is easy.
A panel of five international relations experts discussed the 50th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights before about 40 audience members in 105 Dartmouth Hall yesterday.
Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg said the College's newly announced financial aid packages are meant to increase diversity and improve Dartmouth's standing relative to other Ivy League schools.
As English Professor Shelby Grantham discussed her background as a pacifist, feminist, vegan, Quaker and head of a multi-racial family, she pointed toward a poster that hung on the wall in her office.
Despite popular belief, concentration camps were not "shrouded in secrecy" in Nazi Germany, Robert Gellately said yesterday in a speech to a standing-room only audience in 105 Thornton.