Convocation features Shalala
Wednesday classes rescheduled for opening ceremonies
Wednesday classes rescheduled for opening ceremonies
Most students arriving at an elite Ivy League institution for the first day of college expect to be greeted by advisers with books, maps and maybe a beer - not Tweedledee, Mickey Mouse and a cow. "It's not what I expected," Scott Rankin '98 said from his dorm room in the Fayerweather farm.
For the second year in a row, Dartmouth ranked eighth in U.S. News and World Report's annual rating of national colleges and universities. Out of an overall score of 100, Dartmouth scored 95.4, 1.4 points behind seventh ranked California Institute of Technology.
Only a handful of students have responded to a College-offered incentive plan to get more students to take Fall term off, leaving more than 100 students still without Fall term housing. Dean of the Faculty James Wright sent out a letter early last week saying any student enrolled for the fall or still on the wait list who agrees to change their Dartmouth plan to be off in the fall will receive half off their room rent for the next term they are on. These students will also receive a higher room priority numbers the next term they are on campus and will have the highest priority within their group for course selections. But as of 3 p.m.
Dean of Student Life Holly Sateia and seven Dartmouth students will lead seminars and serve as mentors in the first Young Women's Invitational Leadership Conference to be held Sept.
Zete dog violates abatement rules
Mid-morning fire causes about $8,000 property damage
Nationally recognized scientist and faculty member is picked to head Norris Cotton Cancer Center
The College topped last year's record for alumni donations by $500,000 in its annual fund drive this fiscal year. As of June 30, the Alumni Fund received more than $13.4 million in donations. Last year alumni donated $12.9 million, according to Jeff Sassorosi, the fund's senior associate director. "We are very, very pleased with this year's drive," he said. This year 48.6 percent of alumni gave to the fund, a decrease of about 8 percent from last year. But Sassorosi said they tallied alumni contribution figures differently this year. He said instead of giving alumni six to seven additional months to pay off their pledges and computing those pledges in the total numbers, this year they counted only "cash-in-hand" pledges.
You can tell she is an artist. But it is not that she's clothed all in black in or discusses the newly anointed prince of the New York art clique; it is just that Kate Shortridge '96 has paint all over her pants, jacket and backpack. "I always bring the remnants of being an artist home with me," she said while walking across the Green yesterday afternoon.
Latino students are asking the College to increase support for their community by giving it space on campus and an advisor. Executives of La Alianza Latina, the College's Latino student group, met with Provost Lee Bollinger, Director of Affirmative Action and Equal Opportunity Mary Childers, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Fursternberg, Dean of the College Lee Pelton and Dean of the Faculty James Wright on Wednesday. Ramyar Rossoukh '96, La Alianza's secretary and former president, said he thinks Latino students need to have their own space for meetings and events. "The Latino community is the largest under-represented ethic community that doesn't have a space of its own," he said. Pablo Barrutia '96, La Alianza's treasurer said having some kind of space is "important for the future of La Alianza." The group currently has its meetings in the Collis Center. Although many Latino students live in and use La Casa, Rossoukh said La Casa's primary focus is as a Spanish affinity house.
Two Dartmouth students will explore water-related environmental issues this fall with support from a $1,000 Andrew W.
At a panel on diversity in the Greek system, six student panelists said distrust between minority groups and Greek houses may inhibit advances towards a more diverse system. The panel on Wednesday night, which had five minorities from "mainstream" Greek houses and one member of a historically black fraternity, was sponsored by the Coed Fraternity Sorority Council. Several panel members, speaking to about 20 people, said their houses are more diverse than they were in the past, but progress still has to be made. "I think the Greek system has come a long ways in terms of diversity," said Kiyoe Hashimoto '95, an Asian-American member of Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Dr. Wing-tsit Chan, a leading scholar of Asian philosophy who taught at Dartmouth from 1942 to 1966, died last Friday at Braddock Medical Center in Pittsburgh, Pa.
The College's Board of Trustees will hold its annual Summer term meeting this weekend to set the year's agenda and discuss financial planning. The meeting -- which is more of a retreat for the Trustees -- begins today and runs through Sunday. Though the Board's agenda is confidential, College Spokesman Alex Huppe said the board will make some "long-term conceptual planning." He said he did not know the specifics of the discussion. Board Chairman E.
The College's search for a new director of alumni affairs should be completed in four to six weeks, according to Stanley Colla, vice-president of development and alumni relations. "We're pressing along with that search very vigorously," Colla said. The eight-member search committee chaired by Earth Sciences Professor Richard Birnie began its search in late spring.
As the Summer term's police arrest and Greek house investigation list begins to resemble a life-time criminal's rap sheet, members of the Greek system are upset at what they see as a planned attack on their houses. Over the past nine weeks four arrests of College students, the fingerprinting and interviewing of members of Theta Delta Chi fraternity in connection with a robbery and a number of other houses under police investigation have fraternity and sorority members saying that they feel the police are out to get them. "I have the impression that they are targeting my sorority or the two fraternities across the street," Sigma Delta sorority Summer President Lauren Currie '96 said. But Hanover Police Chief Nick Giaccone said he has made no plans for targeting the College's Greek houses. "There has been no written directives, no police policy of increased enforcement regarding fraternities or sororities," he said. Currie said the police park outside of Sigma Delt on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday nights waiting to bust students. Her sorority recently was under investigation in connection with the arrest of three underage, non-Dartmouth students in the early morning hours of July 21. "We are the safest block in town because there is always at least one car circling," said Matt Miller '96, the summer president of Alpha Delta fraternity. Miller said Hanover Police cars regularly park in front of AD weekend nights.
Despite recent attempts to hammer out a contract, talks between the College and Local Union 560 remain at a standstill more than six weeks after the employees' contract expired on June 30. "We're at a deadlock," Union President Earl Sweet said.
As the summer draws to its end, the number of arrests this summer have raised questions of students' rights regarding breathalizer tests and arrests for unlawful possession of alcohol. This summer four sophomores have been arrested and 14 students taken into protective custody. In addition the arrests of three underaged, non-Dartmouth students for unlawful possession in the early morning hours of July 21 lead to the investigation of Sigma Delta sorority and Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Tyler Stableford '96 plans to spend Fall term living in his van. "I'm planning on living in a van this term," he said. Stableford's plans are unusual &emdash; but that is what life on the more-than-150 student wait-list can do to people.