The Hopkins Center
The
Hopkins Center 
("the Hop") houses the college's drama, music, film, and studio
arts departments, as well as a woodshop, pottery studio, and jewelry studio which are open for use by students and the public.
Its front façade is similar to that of Manhattan’s Lincoln Center, a later design by the famed architect Wallace Harrison. Facilities include two recital halls and one large
auditorium. It is also the location of all student mailboxes and the Courtyard Café dining facility. The Hop is connected to the
Hood Museum of Art and the Loew Auditorium, where films are shown. The Hopkins Center is an important New Hampshire performance
venue.
Nelson A. Rockefeller Center
The Nelson A. Rockefeller Center is a center for interaction and discussion on public policy. Dedicated in 1983, the center stands in tribute to Nelson A. Rockefeller (Class of 1930). Known on campus as
Rocky, the Center provides students,
faculty and community-members opportunities to discuss and learn about public policy, law, and politics. Sponsoring lunch and
dinner discussions with prominent faculty and visitors, the Center aides provides close interaction and discussion.The Rockefeller Center has established a Public-Policy Minor at Dartmouth College and an exchange program on political economy
with Oxford University (Keble College). In addition, the Center provides grants to students engaged in public-policy research
and/or activities.
John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding
The John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding was established in 1982 to honor Dartmouth's twelfth president
(1945-70), John Sloan Dickey. The purpose of the Dickey Center is
to "coordinate, sustain, and enrich the international dimension of liberal arts education at Dartmouth." To this end, the Dickey
Center is committed to helping Dartmouth students prepare for a world in which local, national and global concerns are more
strongly linked than ever. It strives to promote quality scholarly research at Dartmouth concerning international problems and
issues, with an emphasis on work that is innovative and cross-disciplinary. And it seeks to heighten public awareness and to
stimulate debate on pressing international issues.
Aquatic facilities
Alumni Gymnasium hosts
two pools, the Karl Michael Competition Pool and the Spaulding Pool. Together they comprise a total of fifteen 25-yard lanes and
two 50-meter lanes. The Karl Michael Pool, constructed in 1962, was designed by former
Dartmouth College Men's Varsity Swim team captain R. Jackson Smith, class of
1936. In 1970, it was formally named the Karl Michael Pool, after the coach of the men's
varsity swim team from 1939-1970. The pool features eleven 25-yard lanes, with a special bulkhead that can be lowered to create
two 50 meter lanes. The pool area has a seating area for 1,200 spectators. The Michael Pool hosted the 1968 Men's
NCAA 
Championships, in which several American records were set. The pool also features one and three meter diving boards, with a water well 12 to 14
feet deep.Adjacent is the Spaulding Pool. Spaulding Pool is a 10 by 25 yard pool constructed during 1919 and 1920 and designed by
Rich & Mathesius, Architects. The Spaulding Pool is one of the oldest continuously
operating pools in the United States. The pool's interior walls feature
original encaustic tiles apparently designed by noted ceramist Leon Victor Solon. The pool has seating for several hundred
spectators. Both pools are currently used by the Men's and Women's Varsity Swim Teams, as well as a host of other programs within
the college.