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(03/03/04 11:00am)
The hour is early morning; an otherworldly blue haze swirls over the Garden of Gethsemane. Off in a quiet corner, an anguished man kneels in prayer, his brow and tousled hair dripping with sweat, as he quietly struggles to put to rest some inner dilemma.
(01/27/04 11:00am)
Upon entering the Hood Museum of Art's new exhibition of art from the 1990s, titled "Lateral Thinking," one is tempted to conclude, "Art today is abstract and conceptual."
(01/15/04 11:00am)
The Young Alumni of Dartmouth Association launched its Senior Class Gift Campaign last night with a party held in Collis Commonground.
(01/09/04 11:00am)
Noted political satirist P.J. O'Rourke offered a humorous but nuanced defense of the war in Iraq to a standing-room-only crowd in Filene Auditorium Thursday.
(11/13/03 11:00am)
Democratic presidential candidate General Wesley Clark proposed to form a joint U.S.-Saudi commando force to search for Osama bin Laden along the Afghanistan/Pakistan border during a speech focusing on foreign policy before an overflow crowd in Brace Commons yesterday.
(10/21/03 9:00am)
White cloth completely covers one of the principal objects on display in the Hood Museum of Art's current exhibition, "A Point of View: Africa on Display." The work is not concealed because it is undergoing maintenance, though, or for any of the reasons that one might immediately imagine: rather, the mask is being covered up because religious taboos forbid it to be seen in the African country where it was made.
(08/18/03 9:00am)
The second floor of Dartmouth College's Hood Museum of Art remains closed to visitors, sealed off by a tall gray gate.
(08/14/03 9:00am)
When Kathy Kelly first went to take toys and medicine to hospitalized Iraqi children, she met one little girl whose abdomen had literally been ripped open.
(08/04/03 9:00am)
For a price of $4 million, Dartmouth College purchased 53 acres of land on Mount Support Road in Lebanon near Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center this past Friday.
(07/29/03 9:00am)
This year's sophomore family weekend narrowly escaped being titled "High Five."
(07/25/03 9:00am)
A misunderstanding over the pay rate for summer tour guides, coupled with the increased demands placed on tour guides this year, has lowered morale among some members of the program, admissions officers and students report.
(07/23/03 9:00am)
For the College's Southern population, life may be soon getting a little steamier, if not downright juicy.
(07/17/03 9:00am)
Tubestock -- the popular party on the Connecticut River slated for the coming weekend -- is perhaps the most controversial of Dartmouth's festive traditions. It has never been sanctioned by the College nor planned by any central organizing body, and in the recent past, its cancellation has seemed imminent. Nonetheless, the major question about this year's fest seems to be not whether it will happen, according to students and administrators -- but how it can happen safely as possible.
(07/11/03 9:00am)
A Classical Association of New England conference will bring 50 teachers to Dartmouth today in an effort to forge connections between scholars and the broader public, according to its organizers.
(06/25/03 9:00am)
French Professor Marianne Hirsch will take over next month as editor of the PMLA Journal, published by the Modern Language Association of America and often described as the leading journal of modern languages and literary studies.
(05/14/03 9:00am)
Many of the profits accumulated from the liquidation of Jewish property were used directly to fund the costs of World War II, Dr. Goetz Aly argued yesterday.
(05/05/03 9:00am)
A quasi-religious symbol of New Hampshire strength and stoicism since 1805, a rock formation known as the "Old Man on the Mountain" collapsed on Saturday.
(05/02/03 9:00am)
Current German Ambassador to the United States Wolfgang Ischinger has had terrible luck starting out in new jobs.
(04/28/03 9:00am)
Far from dying a natural death, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin was murdered by his colleagues for his anti-American and anti-Jewish stances, Jonathan Brent, the executive editor of Yale University Press, asserted Friday afternoon during a speech.
(04/23/03 9:00am)
Suicide ranks as the second leading cause of death for 15 to 19 year olds. Within the next 24 hours, 1439 teenagers will attempt to kill themselves.