How to dress for life outside the bubble
As sophomore summer winds down, we must look ahead to the beginning of junior year -- where fun goes to die.
As sophomore summer winds down, we must look ahead to the beginning of junior year -- where fun goes to die.
So you've only gone to the River three times, and the Copper Mines zero. Where are your fun summer fling(s)? Summer has definitely turned out differently -- much differently -- than many of us thought it would.
To break up or not to break up. This pivotal question haunts many a Dartmouth couple as one or the other (or both) will travel to London on a History FSP this Fall or spend the Winter in New York slaving for Morgan Stanley.
If you ignored my earlier advice to hook up with half of the campus, you may have found yourself with a permanent pong partner (known outside of our bubble as a "boyfriend" or "girlfriend" with whom you go on "dates.") As sophomore summer draws to a close and the junior class scatters to our respective Bridgewater-provided abodes or overpriced student hovels, the question of what to do with this person looms large.
However much you would like to deny it, Summer term is coming to a close. Finals are approaching, the weather's cooling down and Beta alums are busy setting up Betavision 2.0.
To everything there is a season, and at Dartmouth it seems that our years as upperclassmen are the season for getting fat and going insane.
Setting the record on state politics To the Editor: I am writing to clear up a couple of points from The Dartmouth's Tuesday article on state political races ("Local state politicians prepare for November races," Aug.
From the sound of Phil Aubart's Tuesday column ("A Master Misinterpretation," Aug. 5) all of you back on campus are pretty peeved that the administration supposedly spied on and broke up the Masters tournament.
As the world readies itself for the Opening Ceremonies of the 2008 Olympic Games today, several Dartmouth alumni are also bracing themselves for a chance at the gold. One current student, Craig Henderson '09, and three alums, Adam Nelson '97, Jarrod Shoemaker '04 and Dominic Seiterle '98, will all be competing in Beijing over the next two weeks. Henderson is a member of New Zealand Olympic men's soccer team, which is currently tied for second place in their bracket, behind tournament favorite Brazil.
July 28, 4:22 p.m., Lyme Road Hanover Police arrested an 18-year-old male for simple assault while driving a vehicle.
Jessica Griffen / The Dartmouth Staff Construction on the College's new baseball field, Red Rolfe Field at Biondi Park, has faced several obstacles and setbacks since it began following the end of the spring baseball season in June.
Jill Mortali, current director of Sponsored Programs at Harvard Medical School, has been named as the new director of Dartmouth's Office of Sponsored Projects, which helps to manage grants and assist in the grant proposal process, according to a press released by the College on Tuesday.
The United States government must address the country's growing income inequality to stem the dangerously rising tide of economic protectionism, Tuck School of Business professor Matthew Slaughter told a crowd of more than 300 community members gathered in Spaulding Auditorium on Wednesday.
Dartmouth's Institute of Arctic Studies has received a grant of nearly $3 million from the National Science Foundation's Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training program, the College announced Thursday.
Courtesy of the Associated Press Former six-term Congressman Rob Portman '78, R-Ohio, who later served as chief U.S.
Although the withdrawal of the Association of Alumni's lawsuit against the College in June paved the way for Dartmouth's Board of Trustees to make significant changes to its structure, more than one month later the Board has yet to take any action.
COURTESY OF THE DARTMOUTH AEGIS Stuart Lord will step down as Dean of the Tucker Foundation on Sept.
Courtesy of the Nashua Telegraph New Hampshire continued its run of dominance in the 55th annual Shrine Maple Sugar Bowl, played on Saturday, as the men from the Granite State won the contest for the eighth straight time in convincing fashion, 42-0. Vermont was able to go toe-to-toe with New Hampshire in the first half, but Vermont failed to put any points on the board in two trips to the end zone when the Vermonters allowed two crucial interceptions that killed their momentum. "We felt very good at halftime," Vermont head coach Mike Law of U-32 High School said to the Barre-Montpelier Times Argus.
Tuck School of Business professor Matthew Slaughter coauthored a bipartisan policy brief calling for the country to revamp its unemployment compensation system.