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(04/07/04 9:00am)
Eric Clapton is such a skilled musician that perhaps one day people will say he sold his soul to the devil to reach his level of achievement. Thank God he's over his cheesy pop phase. His best work is blues-based, and if he sticks to it he'll be remembered as a king of the blues in his own right.
(02/26/04 11:00am)
Sometimes a movie is so grossly overrated it's hard to imagine how it got the praise that has been so generously heaped upon it. The ten Oscar nominations received by "Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World" are proof that this is one of those times.
(01/27/04 11:00am)
In a political world where it's hard to say where anybody stands on anything, one can always count on pundits Tucker Carlson and Paul Begala to tell people -- and each other -- exactly what they think. Every weekday on CNN's "Crossfire," the two come bounding from their left and right corners and duke it out on the top issues of the day. After broadcasting from the Top of the Hop Monday, they spoke to The Dartmouth.
(01/16/04 11:00am)
The federal Economic Development Administration presented the Dartmouth Regional Economic Technology Center with a $2.6 million during a Thursday ceremony at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.
(05/21/03 9:00am)
In line with recommendations from the Center for Disease Control, Dartmouth is openly welcoming students and visitors from countries that the World Health Organization has highlighted as being high-risk for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome.
(05/16/03 9:00am)
This Green Key weekend there will be more to do around campus than attending the usual dance parties and playing pong. Tours of Baker Tower, block parties and performances by bands including the Mighty Mighty Bosstones and the Paranoid Social Club will highlight the many options available to students during Green Key 2003.
(05/06/03 9:00am)
"Since the adoption of the United Nations Charter in 1945, at least 89 percent of wars have been initiated by non-democracies," said John Norton Moore, who stated that modern democracies do not wage war on each other, due to a phenomenon he called the Democratic Peace.
(05/02/03 9:00am)
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop '37 does not discriminate between drug lords and executives of tobacco companies when it comes to fostering the disease of addiction.
(04/23/03 9:00am)
Did Nikita Khrushchev really bang his shoe on a table at the United Nations?
(04/22/03 9:00am)
"We need a new television show called 'CDC,'" said Dr. C. Everett Koop. "And I'm only half joking."
(04/11/03 9:00am)
In the photograph, the teenage boy's arms are crossed, his lips taut, his eyebrows arched just enough to let us know that he is old enough to know what happened in his home, Rwanda -- and that he will not forget.
(04/01/03 10:00am)
"Yemen is one of the most outspoken of the Arab countries," Sheila Carapico, a professor at the University of Richmond, said, explaining that Yemeni citizens enjoy relative freedom of speech and of the press.
(03/31/03 10:00am)
Former Senator Gary Hart slowly walked across the Green, wearing a tie with bald eagles clutching the Declaration of Independence in their talons, and spoke of his admiration for Thomas Jefferson.
(03/31/03 10:00am)
"Shock and dismay," was how government professor Michael Mastanduno described the "Shock and Awe" campaign used by American forces in Iraq.
(02/13/03 11:00am)
Afghanistan cannot be compared to the Balkans, said Tom Barfield -- an anthropology professor at Boston University widely considered to be the foremost American expert on Afghanistan -- in a lecture about ethnicity and nationalism yesterday afternoon.
(02/07/03 11:00am)
As we climbed to the top of Baker Tower to take the cover picture for this year's Winter Carnival issue, a new perspective of the snow-covered Upper Valley became evident. Below us, students scurried to and from classes as the sun shone warmly over campus for the first time in weeks. Much about Winter Carnival has changed over its 93-year history, yet this year has seen the revival of a tradition that had faltered during the tenure of current students at the College -- the colossal snow sculpture. And the success of Gandalf has not been the only result of student activism on campus in the recent months. Throughout December, students mobilized to protest the elimination of the swimming and diving teams, eventually securing the programs' reinstatement.
(02/04/03 11:00am)
Students trekked to Dartmouth Hall in droves yesterday to hear Professors Ronald Edsforth of the history department and Allan Stam of the government department take on opposing sides of the debate over a potential war in Iraq.
(01/27/03 11:00am)
"No Islamic country, now, has been closer to American interests, on being opposed first to the Taliban, then to Saddam Hussein," Amir Mahallati said about Iran in a speech yesterday evening. He views Iran as the "catalyst to bridge America to the Islamic world."
(01/23/03 11:00am)
Beyond its physical effects, the practice of torture leaves serious psychological impacts upon its victims, members of a panel on torture and human rights said yesterday.
(01/14/03 11:00am)
Former President of Ireland Mary Robinson's work toward the infusion of ethics and human rights into the globalization movement did not end in September with her term as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.