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Dartmouth's and medical
The medical school facilities at Dartmouth College sit in a complex on the north side of Dartmouth's campus and includes academic, administrative, research, and presentation facilities.
During his almost forty years as Dartmouth's president ( 1779 – 1815 ), Wheelock oversaw the construction of Dartmouth Hall and the founding of Dartmouth Medical School, the fourth-oldest medical school in the country ; he also maintained the College ’ s fiscal solvency throughout the Revolutionary War, mainly through the Vermont legislature ’ s grant of 23, 000 acres ( 93 km² ) in Wheelock, Vermont.
SAPAs help victims contact counselors and other medical advisors, as well as provide information about legal aspects of the process, including reporting to the Hanover, New Hampshire police and to Safety and Security, Dartmouth's security force.

Dartmouth's and school
It was Dartmouth's first high school in 1934.
Wheelock subsequently founded Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, naming the school in Lord Dartmouth's honor in hopes of getting his financial support.
Corks & Curls, the University of Virginia annual, regularly printed lists of the yells and colors of the various colleges ; in 1888 it included Dartmouth's school yell, a part of which was the phrase " wa-hoo-wa.
* The Dartmouth Review continues to refer to Dartmouth's sports teams as the " Indians " after the traditional school mascot which was officially discarded in the early 1970s.
For example, " the second issue has a long and rather tediously written discussion of New Hampshire school laws, and a report of Dartmouth's Commencement activities from Wednesday, August 28, 1799.

Dartmouth's and was
Thus, when Dartmouth's Winter Carnival -- widely recognized as the greatest, wildest, roaringest college weekend anywhere, any time -- was broadcast over a national television hookup, Prexy John Sloan Dickey appeared on the screen in rugged winter garb, topped off by a tam-o'-shanter which he confessed had been acquired from a Smith girl.
Dartmouth's original sports field was the Green, where students played cricket and old division football during the 19th century.
Richard Hovey's " Men of Dartmouth " was elected as the best of Dartmouth's songs in 1896, and became the school's official song in 1926.
Dartmouth's Winter Carnival tradition was the subject of the 1939 film Winter Carnival starring Ann Sheridan and written by Budd Schulberg ' 36 and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Originally Dartmouth's only wharf was Bayard's Cove, a relatively small but picturesque area protected by a fort at the southern end of the town.
Notwithstanding Dartmouth's connections with the crown and respectable society, it was a major base for privateering in medieval times.
Within his first year at Olney a gallery was added to the church to increase its congregational capacity, and the weekly prayer-meetings were moved in 1769 to Lord Dartmouth's mansion, the Great House, to accommodate even greater numbers.
Dartmouth's history was that of an agricultural community, but during the late 19th century its coastline became a resort area for the wealthy members of New Bedford society.
Dartmouth's first city hall was built in the early 1960s on land with the Dartmouth Common.
His primary activity during his undergraduate career was as a contributor to the Jack-O-Lantern, Dartmouth's nationally known humor magazine.
A shortened course was run in the spring of 1952 ( because of a cloud-shrouded summit ) that started just above the Lip of the Headwall, and was won by Dartmouth's Bill Beck.
One of Lord Dartmouth's main concerns was the evacuation of sick soldiers " and the many families and their effects to be brought off ".
He was a member of Dartmouth's 1996 undefeated Ivy League champion team, and served as President of Chi Heorot fraternity in 1997.
Hanover, New Hampshire was chosen for the site, and in 1771, four students were graduated in Dartmouth's first commencement, including Wheelock's son John.
In 2000, Professor Samwick was awarded Dartmouth's Karen E. Wetterhahn Award for Distinguished Creative or Scholarly Achievement.
His administration was marked by numerous academic initiatives, a growth of the physical campus, and a strengthening of Dartmouth's graduate programs and professional schools.
Dartmouth's professional schools also grew under President McLaughlin's tenure: the Thayer School of Engineering received a $ 15 million grant to expand and improve facilities ; the Tuck School of Business was strengthened ; and Dartmouth Medical School was brought into financial equilibrium, greatly increasing its sponsored research and fund raising efforts.
He served on the faculty of Dartmouth College as a professor of religion from 1972 to 1989, where he was the first recipient of Dartmouth's Distinguished Teaching Prize.
Dartmouth's Sigma Kappa chapter was the first sorority to be founded on Dartmouth's campus.

Dartmouth's and founded
The Sing Dynasty ( often called " The Sings ") is one of Dartmouth's two secular co-ed a cappella groups, founded by two ' 10s in the spring of 2008.

Dartmouth's and United
Dartmouth College's Alumni Gymnasium, located in Hanover, New Hampshire, in the United States, is the center of Dartmouth College's athletic life and hosts venues for many of Dartmouth's 34 varsity sports.

Dartmouth's and University
Many of Dartmouth's existing Trustees refused to obey the Legislature's act, however, and the Trustees of Dartmouth University failed to obtain a quorum to conduct any business.
* " The Persistence of ' Wah-Hoo-Wah ,' Dartmouth's ' Indian Yell ,' at the University of Virginia "

Dartmouth's and School
The campus of the Thayer School sits in a complex on the west side Dartmouth's campus near the Connecticut River.

Dartmouth's and ),
Dartmouth's other athletic facilities in Hanover include the Friends of Dartmouth Rowing Boathouse and the old rowing house storage facility ( both located along the Connecticut River ), the Hanover Country Club, Dartmouth's oldest remaining athletic facility ( established in 1899 ), and the Corey Ford Rugby Clubhouse.
*"' At the nadir of discouragement ': The Story of Dartmouth's Kenneth Roberts Collection ," by Jack Bales, Dartmouth College Library Bulletin, n. s., 30 ( April 1990 ), pp. 45-53.
Dartmouth's eldest son George Legge, Viscount Lewisham ( c. 1703-1732 ), predeceased his father, leaving a son, William.
Owen Chamberlain-class of 1941, one of Dartmouth's only three Nobel Prize winners ( Physics 1959 ), participated in the Manhattan Project.

Dartmouth's and College
Daniel Webster, an alumnus of the class of 1801, presented the College's case to the Supreme Court, which found the amendment of Dartmouth's charter to be an illegal impairment of a contract by the state and reversed New Hampshire's takeover of the College.
In 2004, Booz Allen Hamilton selected Dartmouth College as a model of institutional endurance " whose record of endurance has had implications and benefits for all American organizations, both academic and commercial ," citing Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward and Dartmouth's successful self-reinvention in the late 19th century.
Dartmouth's campus buildings vary in age from Wentworth and Thornton Halls of the 1820s ( the oldest surviving buildings constructed by the College ) to new dormitories and mathematics facilities completed in 2006.
Dartmouth's nine libraries are all part of the collective Dartmouth College Library, which comprises 2. 48 million volumes and 6 million total resources, including videos, maps, sound recordings, and photographs.
Dartmouth's athletic teams compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association ( NCAA ) Division I eight-member Ivy League conference ; some teams also participate in the Eastern College Athletic Conference ( ECAC ).
Dartmouth's alumni are known for their devotion to the College.
Nine of Dartmouth's 17 presidents were alumni of the College.
* Dartmouth CollegeDartmouth's in Town Again, Come Stand Up Men, As the Backs Go Tearing By, and Glory to Dartmouth
He taught at Dartmouth College during the early 1810s and had a house built in Hanover, New Hampshire that now serves as Dartmouth's Blunt Alumni Center.
Samson Occom and the British Board of Trustees headed by Lord Dartmouth opposed the addition of the college, and despite ( or because of ) Lord Dartmouth's opposition, Wheelock named the college Dartmouth College.

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