Cords go vocal in their recent a cappella shows
By Melanie Gustin | February 5, 1996The Cords, Dartmouth's newest a cappella group, gave a vibrant performance this weekend in the Hyphen.
The Cords, Dartmouth's newest a cappella group, gave a vibrant performance this weekend in the Hyphen.
Sold-out show in Collis Common Ground will feature spectacle of music and cuisine
Sam McIntire / The Dartmouth Staff Today and tomorrow only, take a break from your studies and come see "No Exit" in the Bentley Theater in the Hop. The director, J.
Casque and Gauntlet Senior Society hosted the dynamic Untamed Shrews last night. Self-described as a collaborative women's performance group, the Shrews' production was an absorbing and unique collection of excerpts from a variety of women's written work. The Untamed Shrews consist of 16 talented and outgoing women.
Concert features compositions by Berlioz
The Winter Whingding showcased the talents of the Decibelles, the Brown Derbys, and its hosts, the Rockapellas on Friday night in Spaulding Auditorium.
The Flirtations gave a rousing performance to a tightly packed Spaulding Auditiorium Friday night.
Looking for a night of music, theatre, dancing, and dining? You don't even have to leave Hanover to find it.
The Conservative Union at Dartmouth collected more than 500 student signatures on a petition against the proposal to institute all-freshman dormitories. In its report last spring, the Committee on the First-Year Experience recommended the College convert three dormitory clusters into "Senior Faculty Fellow Clusters" consisting of freshmen, undergraduate advisors and one faculty member per cluster. "We welcome proposals but at the same time, there has to be discussion afterwards, and we're against this one," said CUaD member Andrew Bender '96, who organized the petition. Jim Brennan '96, CUaD's acting co-president, explained the group's motivation to sponsor the petition.
A court battle between the University of New Hampshire and a professor suspended for allegedly making sexist comments in his classroom has few implications for free speech at Dartmouth, College officials said. University of New Hampshire Professor J.