College has first dibs on area property
For Bray Mitchell and her husband, third-generation homeown-ers on Rope Ferry Road, selling their home will be a simple affair.
For Bray Mitchell and her husband, third-generation homeown-ers on Rope Ferry Road, selling their home will be a simple affair.
The U.S. Dept. of Education reviews campus information, from crime to graduation rates
National polls show the American public strongly supports military action against Iraq, but many in academia remain opposed to President George W.
Five minutes spent at the intersection of Main and Wheelock Streets would be enough to convince the casual observer that the Town of Hanover and Dartmouth College are inextricably linked. But despite the constant flow of people, cars, goods and services, few students are aware of the intricacy of this relationship at the governmental level. The actions of the town's Board of Selectmen, the highest level of local government, influences aspects of campus life from water quality to construction of new dorms to late-night noise levels.
Students ask music department to create three new programs
Members of Dartmouth's Young Democrats always make two sets of signs before any political demonstration. One set, paid for with donations from various Democratic organizations, may bear the names of specific candidates.
With almost three weeks at the College under their belts, members of the Class of 2006 said they already feel at home on campus -- and shared some of their newly-acquired opinions and expertise about life at Dartmouth. This year's freshman class said that if they have learned one thing since arriving at Dartmouth, it is to take advantage of every opportunity offered -- free food or otherwise -- to help ease the transition from high school to college. "I wish I had known that it's so easy to get involved.
In the middle of February in 2001, a female student happened to be walking by Psi Upsilon fraternity. What she heard shouted from the porch -- a chanting rendition of "Wah-hoo-wah, scalp 'em, scalp 'em" -- would become the focus for tense campus debate and, eventually, six months of social probation for the fraternity. In all the controversy over the sanctions, one criticism emerged that would highlight the sometimes cloudy status Dartmouth enjoys as a private institution: because the College receives federal funds it should have to abide by free speech principles that would make such a punishment unconstitutional. Dartmouth itself has a quick answer to that complaint -- no. Officials covet its status as a private institution, which effectively shields the College from potentially costly First Amendment lawsuits. Almost 200 years ago in the precedent-setting Dartmouth College Case, Daniel Webster arbitrated in front of the U.S.
Folds releases second album of solo career featuring new and old songs along with bonus DVD
The Dartmouth men's water polo team embarked upon its search for a second consecutive New England Championship during the weekend of Sept.
To gauge support for providing student activities funds to a broader range of student social groups -- including Greek houses -- the Student Assembly sent out a campus-wide email last night asking for student opinion on where such funds should be directed. The BlitzMail message asked students to identify the social spaces most in need of improvement, how many times a week they use various social spaces and whether student activities money should be used to fund improvements to coed, sorority and fraternity organizations, the Fuel nightclub and affinity houses. "We want to see if the College is funding spaces that students actually use," Student Life Committee Chair Amit Anand '03 said. The survey was inspired by a suggestion from Student Life Committee Member Jim Baehr '05 that the Assembly use some of its funding to make improvements in run-down fraternity basements. "I see a really need for fraternities' social spaces not to be as disgusting as they have been," Baehr said.
Dartmouth's alma mater touts the granite of New Hampshire. The governor of the Granite State has an ex officio seat on Dartmouth's Board of Trustees.
Dartmouth's lobbying expenditures -- about $40,000 in 2001 -- reap grants in the tens of millions
Dartmouth, with its serene location and Ivy League charm, doesn't exactly project a warlike image.
Former CBS News Middle East affairs consultant Jack Shaheen argued that Hollywood stereotypes dehumanize Arabs and Arab-Americans in a speech in Dartmouth Hall last night entitled, "Reel Bad Arabs." Shaheen, a retired Southern Illinois University professor, engaged the audience with a plethora of evidence of Hollywood stereotyping, gathered from his more than 20 years of research.
If the current tensions between the United States and Iraq weren't so deadly serious, the situation would be downright comical.
Late last Wednesday night a Mid-Fayerweathers fire alarm was accidentally set off. It was a small and, it turned out, inconsequential event. But both the Hanover Police and Dartmouth's Safety and Security cruised onto the scene.
I was raised on Manhattan's Upper-West Side and so did not see the planes hit that morning, and the towers falling or the subsequent fires.
I had hoped for bigger biceps from my summer exercise regimen, but I had not anticipated enlightenment.
Editor's note: This is the first installment in a five-part series examining Dartmouth Dining Services' structure, quality and history. Dartmouth's meal system, the admissions office proudly proclaims, is unique among its peer schools. A survey of the Ivy League's dining services confirmed that Dartmouth is indeed the only institution to rely exclusively on a declining balance, per-item system. But there are surprises, too.