2007 Freshman Issue: Editors' Note
Welcome to Dartmouth!
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Welcome to Dartmouth!
Efforts on the part of Germany to remake public perception of German business corporations after the fall of the Third Reich were as much a matter of shrewd economic sense as they were of a sincere attempt to restore its integrity, Prof. Jonathan Wiesen said to a Dartmouth audience in a speech on Tuesday.
Dartmouth loves America -- and American meat products, as was confirmed yesterday evening during a barbecue entitled "Dartmouth Loves America" on the Collis Center porch.
Not without stirring controversy, Seattle-based super-chain Starbucks Coffee Co. recently expressed interested in opening up a branch of its ubiquitous coffee shops in downtown Hanover, possibly in the site currently occupied by Dirt Cowboy Cafe.
After its doors shut recently to "review business options," what was formerly Mojo's Bistro will remain closed indefinitely, according to owner Nigel Leeming.
The two prospective students in the Class of 2007 arrested by the Hanover Police over this year's Dimensions weekend are nearing completion in fulfilling their respective debts to society. Both students -- whose names have not been released more than a month after they were held in jail -- have embarked upon an alcohol awareness program in lieu of a heavy fine and an addition to their permanent records.
Times have changed since Grandpa had to trudge eight -- or in some cases, 80 -- miles every morning through waist-deep snow to get to school. Through the workings of modern science and award-winning tinkering with parking policy by Facilities Operation and Management, increasing numbers of Dartmouth students can now forgo the character-building trek to class and ride high in their horseless carriages.
In a public referendum yesterday, Dresden School District residents denied the Hanover High School forensic program the public funds that its future hinges upon, thwarting the tenacious efforts of debate team supporters, which came to a head this week.
Dorm improvement has never tasted this good. Luring students with Lou's cakes and pies, the Dorm Improvement Group have been holding informational sessions throughout the week to clue the campus in to their mission to furnish College dormitories with the amenities students want.
Alicia Williams can't find a home of her own in the place she has spent all her life, the Upper Valley. A Dartmouth Dining Services employee, she and her husband have spent the last two years scouring the newspapers for a home in their price range.
Sixty-eight percent of 1127 students who responded to a survey conducted by The Dartmouth oppose an immediate American invasion of Iraq under the present circumstances, with 49 percent saying "no" and 19 percent saying "not yet" to war.
Just how real is 50 Cent? Hyped by the likes of Eminem and Dr. Dre as the realest rapper to rise to the fore of the authenticity-starved rap scene, 50 Cent might seem poised to fall short of such daunting expectations.
Student groups are working to alert the campus to the alarming rates of HIV infection in the black community as part of a national campaign that began last Friday with National Black HIV/AIDS Awareness Day.
The Dartmouth College Health Services and the Nathan Smith Society have spearheaded a campaign to spread the word on the dangers of meningitis, a potentially fatal disease known for striking college campuses, in the hope that more students will volunteer for vaccines and be able to detect its early symptoms.
War with North Korea would be as crazy as some like to think North Korean leader Kim Jong Il is, Prof. David Kang said in a speech last night at the Top of the Hop.
Revisions to the student alcohol policy in recent years have been steadfastly flanked by a flotilla of new and old prevention and treatment programs in the fight against drug and alcohol abuse.
As he boarded a plane bound for America, Megheta Serad left his father in Ethiopia with words of comfort in his absence, said Morris Dees last night in the keynote address for the two-week celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. at Spaulding auditorium.
Sponsored by the Dartmouth Club of the Upper Valley and a slew of local businesses, the regional winter games of the Special Olympics took place Saturday before a warm showing of community support at the Dartmouth Skiway and Gariplay Field.
In the aftermath of the yesterday's announcement that Dartmouth swimming and diving will remain a varsity sport for the next 10 years, both students and administrators seem to be relieved that the episode has come to a mutually satisfying close.
The Sixth United States Circuit Court of Appeals narrowly upheld the use of affirmative action in the University of Michigan Law School's admissions process on May 14, bolstering legal support for institutions like Dartmouth that consider race in admissions and faculty recruitment.