It's All in the Family
As I sat in FoCo last week, I noticed yet again how close even the most seemingly mundane parts of campus make me feel to my family.
As I sat in FoCo last week, I noticed yet again how close even the most seemingly mundane parts of campus make me feel to my family.
As much as we might try to fight it, moving away from home changes things.
Work began this week on the Innovation Center and New Venture Incubator, an initiative announced in College President Phil Hanlon’s inaugural address in September. Despite delays in the construction permit approval process, the College aims to complete construction by spring term, new venture incubator programs director Jamie Coughlin said.
In the finely crafted art of distributing information via flyers, there are three keys to success, much like with real estate or electrical outlets. In no particular order, these are location, location, location. This mantra is the core of The Stall Street Journal, whose single-page publications are strategically poised at eye level in restrooms across campus.
When imagining a theater professor, I would not immediately think of Peter Hackett. Instead, I picture a man in a black turtleneck and beret, someone who sports the sort of mustache that belongs in an 18th century portrait and drops French words into every conversation.
The most prominent images in my Dartmouth memory reel are those I associate with stripped artifice — emotional tipping points, instances of revelation, discoveries of unfamiliar interests and the privilege of feeling trusted
'16 Girl: Now the employees in KAF know my name! '16 Guy: Not sure if that's something to be proud of or ashamed of. \n'14 Guy: Did everyone just decide to wear Canada Goose once they got to campus this term?
First-world problems had never been so relevant until a week ago, when I took my phone out of my pocket and realized with horror that it would not turn on.
There’s something about winter that makes us feel like freshmen all over again.
HELL WEEK SUN GOD RETURNS: Why is he still here? The world may never know. GETTING TAPPED: Even if you didn't get that incredibly trolly blitz from the Sphinx, we're sure you've heard rumors about cryptic blitzes and the magic of secret societies. SUPER BOWL SUNDAY: Whether you're rooting for the Broncos or the Seahawks or just in it for Bruno Mars and the commercials, celebrating America's favorite holiday is a must this weekend. DINESH D'SOUZA: In case you case you missed it: this former Review editor-in-chief, who conveniently just visited the College, pleaded not guilty to charges of campaign finance fraud last week.
In case you were wondering, the snooze button is a terrible invention that only makes you more tired.
Dartmouth students need to put things in perspective.
Dick's House should be able to collect evidence after a sexual assault.
With the Winter Olympics set to begin next week, The Dartmouth sat down with government professor William Wohlforth to discuss security preparations in Sochi, Russia and the possibility of a terrorist attack.
This weekend, the men’s hockey team is set to face two very different teams. The Big Green will play No. 3 Quinnipiac University, the second-placed team in the ECAC, on Friday and will then host Princeton University, a team that has lost seven of its last eight games, Saturday night.
The role of student-athletes in an increasingly business-oriented college sports world has been thrust back into the spotlight this week as Northwestern University quarterback Kain Colter, together with former University of California at Los Angeles football player Ramogi Huma, announced the establishment of the College Athletes Players Association. The group aims to give athletes a greater voice in NCAA policy, and would essentially function as a labor union. Among the demands on its agenda: prevention of brain injuries, scholarships that cover the full cost of tuition, funding for continued education and guaranteed retention of scholarships for athletes whose careers are ended due to injury.
David Barr, a College employee who works at the Hinman Mail Center, pleaded not guilty to a charge of criminal threatening at his arraignment on Thursday morning, according to acting Hanover Police chief Frank Moran. Hanover Police arrested Barr around noon on Wednesday at the Hinman Mail Center after Barr allegedly posted a threatening message on his Facebook account.
Patricia Kane ’86 was arrested by Hanover Police Monday night in Lyme after authorities issued an Amber Alert, alleging that she had abducted her 12-year-old biological son from his foster family in Sunderland, Vt.
Maintenance on the pool, the largest in Alumni Gym, is expected to last until the fall.
This year, Obama's comments on education focused on college accessibility, universal pre-kindergarten education and creating partnerships between employers and universities.