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(10/11/96 9:00am)
As Dartmouth rowers gear up for another season on the Connecticut River, the men's crew squads are setting their sights high. Both the heavyweights and the lightweights expect to finish near the top of the pack this year. With a little luck and a lot of sweat, they may be able to improve upon last year's performances.
(07/31/96 9:00am)
As the 1996 football season draws near, many Ivy League football fanatics are nurturing high expectations for the Dartmouth gridiron squad. Having lost few of its stars to graduation, the Big Green hope to build upon its seven game unbeaten streak and, with a little luck, bring the Ivy League title back to Hanover.
(07/27/96 9:00am)
The assertive glass and steel face of the Hopkins Center stands out among the various buildings surrounding the Dartmouth Green. Just as this architecture adds a unique flavor to the Dartmouth campus, the cultural programs and activities that the Hopkins Center provides all contribute, in their own unique ways, to a well-rounded liberal arts education.
(07/11/96 9:00am)
MacKenzie Hurd '98 has dreamed of becoming a professional golfer for a long time now. Ever since he made his high school's varsity golf team as a freshman, Hurd has harbored ambitions to someday play alongside the greatest golfers in the world on the PGA Tour.
(06/25/96 9:00am)
French actress Jean Seberg did not live past the age of 40; she died by her own hand in 1979. In Director Mark Rappaport's 1995 documentary, "From the Journals of Jean Seberg," the film icon of the 1950s and 1960s narrates her own life story from beyond the grave.
(02/29/96 11:00am)
People often wish their sibling relationships had been more harmonious while growing up, even if it was just for their parents' sake.
(02/08/96 11:00am)
It has been said Americans know surprisingly little of the various cultures present in their own hemisphere, as past and present-day European music, literature and art dominate Americans' knowledge of foreign lifestyles.
(02/01/96 11:00am)
This spring the Hood Museum of Art hopes to return to the Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi human remains found near Lake Winnepesauke and donated to the College in 1945.
(01/22/96 11:00am)
Some of them jump out at you with great force while others slowly draw you in after a single glance. Passing through Collis Cafe, you can not help noticing them.
(01/10/96 11:00am)
This term's Vaughan recital series will showcase the extraordinary talent of recognized musical virtuosos, talented professors and Dartmouth students. All the events will take place in the Faulkner Recital Hall of the Hopkins Center.
(09/27/95 10:00am)
"Buenos Aires," the Dartmouth Aires' latest album, has much more to offer its listeners than just a title.
(09/26/95 10:00am)
Mystery and uncertainty pervaded the Great American Desert for most Euro-Americans in 1830, for the "savage redman" and the mythical buffalo ruled this vast land of the Louisiana Purchase. Only the bravest of settlers and explorers dared venture into these Great Plains, and upon return, they would recount to eager Easterners wild tales of danger and adventure enlivened by their imaginations.
(09/25/95 10:00am)
September 25 marks the 10th Anniversary of Dartmouth's Hood Museum of Art, and who would have believed so much could be achieved in those quick ten years. In this time, the Hood has established itself as a major educational and cultural resource for the College and the entire Upper Valley region.
(09/20/95 9:00am)
Who could ever imagine the enormous power held within the click of a shutter -- a power capable of unleashing emotions and overturning ideas in mere fractions of seconds. By harnessing this power and coupling it with imagination, diligence, and experience, five prominent Native American photographers are confronting issues of Native American identity in the exhibition "Image and Self in Contemporary Native American Photoart."
(05/22/95 9:00am)
The "Spirit Stream Storm" experience is akin to being on the receiving end of a sandblaster. Life flashes before your eyes in a mad and chaotic image assault on the retina -- blinking is the only defense. Bruce Posner's avant-garde was an eye-opener for the audience Friday night at Loew Auditorium.
(05/11/95 9:00am)
The invinsible figure leaps across the screen, combating oppression and injustice where ever it is found! Yet without his disguise, his true love does not notice him. Superman you say? No! It's the mighty and fearless Zorro!
(05/08/95 9:00am)
Dartmouth may not know what a "zumbye" is, but the acappella group sure knows how to handle an audience. They proved that fact Friday night in concert with the Rockapellas and Dodecaphonics at the annual Spring Sing.
(05/02/95 9:00am)
Picture a couple of scowling Japanese soldiers clad in perfectly pressed uniforms, each adorned with a samurai sword. Now place this image in a Salvador Dali painting. Throw in a bunch of flowers, a little sex, a rising sun, and some graphic hara kiri scenes. Puree for 90 minutes and get ready to swallow "Mishima."
(04/21/95 9:00am)
Is rape a state of mind? Can willing participants unconsciously commit this crime? Must rape involve violence? Featured as part of Sexual Assault Awareness Week, Marco Bellocchio's film, "The Conviction," examines the gray areas between violent passion and violation.