Hosokawa's Column Misrepresented the Role of the Sciences in Education
To the Editor:
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To the Editor:
With most of the members of the Class of 1999 at home and enjoying their summer vacations, the Office of First-Year Students is preparing for the arrival of their successors, the members of the Class of 2000.
Heated debate on the Greek system, rallies against racial intolerance, visiting Republican presidential candidates and imploding hospitals were some of the incidents dominating the 1995-96 Dartmouth year.
This year's Tubestock event may be in jeopardy due to river currents that are expected to be four to five times faster than normal.
Voices, a new student group hosting events that enable members of the Dartmouth community to listen and converse with some of the College's most unique students, professors and administrators, is now seeking College recognition.
Plans for a fraternity Olympics, the production of a document summarizing each of the College's fraternities and revising new member education for College sororities are some of the proposals being studied by the Summer term officers of the Inter fraternity and Panhellenic councils.
The Coed Fraternity Sorority Council elected Jaime Staples '98, a sister at Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, as its Summer-term president in last night's elections at the Collis Student Center.
After several years of declining prices in the recommended incoming freshman computer package, the price of the suggested hardware for the Class of 2000 is expected to cost as much as $220 more than last year's package.
Sen. Robert Dole will speak at Alpha Delta fraternity Saturday morning during a campaign stop that will be broadcast by Music Television, according to MTV and the Dole for President campaign.
A unique freshman class, the return of presidential politics and several campus controversies made for an active fall term in 1995.
Anthony Lightfoot '92, who plead guilty to violating the civil rights of Morris Whitaker, the treasurer of the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association, was sentenced to five years probation and ordered to sell his assault weapon to pay for fines imposed by a federal court last Friday, according to the Valley News.
About 50 students and administrators gathered beside the Senior Fence last night to participate in a candlelight vigil designed to help students cope with the three recent suicides in the Dartmouth community.
Crowds of students and alumni filled Hanover's streets and the Green Friday for the College's 100th Dartmouth Night celebration, the traditional beginning of the College's homecoming weekend.
Each Homecoming weekend, Hanover businesses reap the economic benefits of the thousands of alumni dollars that flow into town.
Although students may notice a brown discoloration in the water supply to many parts of campus today, a spokesman from the Hanover Water Works Company said the discoloration will cause no harm to students.
Former Massachusetts Senator Paul Tsongas '62 on Saturday condemned both major American political parties for moving away from the "passionate center" positions that most Americans support.
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop '37 told members of the Class of 1999 that new medical education and technologies will enable doctors to provide better care in the future, putting patients' health over cost cutting and political wrangling.
Over the past several weeks, Dartmouth's department of Facilities, Operations and Management has been working feverishly to prepare for Memorial Field's debut as a graduation site.
Following a successful two-year trial, the College recently decided to renew the Graduate Associate in Residence program for the next year and continue to investigate its expansion.
Dartmouth's need-blind admissions policy, one of the College's "jewels," is causing an increased strain on the College's financial resources, jeopardizing the future of the policy.