GOP contests new voters at polls
Democrats say Republicans targeted liberal voters in college towns
Democrats say Republicans targeted liberal voters in college towns
When Professor Marysa Navarro came to Dartmouth in 1968, the only female employees were secretaries and the only female students were ones bussed in from women's colleges as male students' party dates for big weekends. Within less than five years, the first co-ed class would graduate from Dartmouth, largely due to Navarro's unwavering insistence that women had as much of a right to a Dartmouth education as did men.
Economic disparities between the descendants of former slaves and free blacks largely disappeared within just two generations following emancipation, according to a study by Dartmouth economist Bruce Sacerdote that may lend ammunition to opponents of slavery reparations. "There's nothing positive you can say about slavery," Sacerdote said.
SUNY prof.: No gender equality without rethinking masculinity
While ethnic organizations at many colleges and universities are often separate and function independently of one another, Dartmouth's Pan-Asian Council has adopted a model that brings together the College's diverse Asian populations. At the Asian Pacific Americans in Higher Education Conference last weekend, PAC members gave a presentation highlighting the council's success at Dartmouth in an attempt to help other schools bridge difficulties in forming similar organizations. PAC was founded in 1997 by leaders of Asian student groups who "saw the need for an umbrella group to facilitate communication," member Alan Cheng '03 said. The organization brings together various student groups such as the Dartmouth Chinese Culture Society, the Korean American Students' Association and the Dartmouth Japanese Society to discuss issues affecting the Asian community.
During the 2002 fiscal year, Dartmouth saw an increase of more than 20 percent in grants and external funding.
At the helm of the ISTS, Vatis reconciles issues of civil liberty with the demand for national security
Sununu, Shaheen race could help decide control of U.S. Senate
Editor's note: This is the sixth in a series of articles chronicling the New Hampshire congressional campaigns. Despite a Democrat-Republican face-off that could change the balance of power in both houses of Congress, a trend of low student-voter turnout both at Dartmouth and throughout the nation is unlikely to change, according to political pundits. Though the contested issues in the upcoming election range from abortion rights to boosting the sagging economy, candidates' efforts to mobilize youth voters have largely been fruitless.
Dartmouth students nervous about increasingly competitive graduate school admissions and a tight job market often take classes under Dartmouth's Non-Recording Option to keep their grade-point average as high as possible.
In the first event of the Dartmouth-Tuck Forum on the International Economy, renowned economic analyst Alan Wolff spoke Friday about international trade policies, calling for a re-evaluation of our trade policies in a post-Sept.
A drop in arrests during this year's Homecoming festivities was offset by a rise in the number of incidents reported to and investigated by Safety and Security compared to the same period in 2001. The Hanover Police Department confirmed 12 incidents involving arrests over the weekend, 10 of which occurred Friday night on the Green.
In bucolic Hanover, it's not surprising that town residents prefer to overlook the inconveniences caused by Dartmouth's Homecoming festivities.
You're too sensitive!" Why, because I don't like the fact that my identity is plastered on a T-shirt or jacket being worn by someone who knows nothing about me? "We're paying tribute; you should consider it an honor." Apparently, I should feel honored that people treat my identity like any other "mascot," like mammals, insects and other animals. Since when is it OK to have a person or group of people to be mascots?
It could be a postcard -- colorful leaves crunch under foot as green-and-white clad students congregate on the Green.
Fall has arrived, and as Martha Stewart would say, "it's a good thing." The signs of the season are all around us: the leaves are changing color, the '06 girls are realizing that half the campus already owns that J-Crew sweater-jacket they were so proud of buying, and humor columnists are adding strained Martha Stewart references to their pieces. Yet to Dartmouth students, fall means something even more.
This year will mark the first Homecoming with no ban on first-year students attending fraternity parties.
While small numbers of Dartmouth freshmen continue to rush the field during the annual Homecoming game, the practice appears to have waned considerably since its official prohibition in 1986. The tradition originated in the 1950s, when large groups of freshmen ran out onto the field after halftime to form the numbers of their year.
Recent grads flood campus during Homecoming weekend
When looking ahead to the Big Green football team's Homecoming matchup with defending Ivy League champion Harvard on Saturday at Memorial Field, there's good news, and then there's good news. Good news: With wins over Yale, Holy Cross, and Columbia, Dartmouth (3-3, 2-1 Ivy) is riding a three-game winning streak, the team's first since 1997. More good news: At 4-2 (3-0 Ivy), this year's Crimson squad is hardly the unstoppable juggernaut that went undefeated in 2001 and came back from a 21-0 halftime deficit to beat Dartmouth, 31-21, in Cambridge last year. Despite all this good news, however, the defending Ivy League champions are still no pushover, as the Crimson is tied with Pennsylvania for first place in the Ancient Eight after defeating Cornell, Brown and Princeton. Harvard's offense is led by sophomore quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick, who has a 143.79 quarterback rating, the second best in the Ivy League.