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(10/26/98 11:00am)
Last winter when a Star of David with the message "Death to You" was scrawled on the door of one of the River apartments, the response was a forum in the Roth Center with a huge panel of students from all walks of Dartmouth life, followed by a break-out session in smaller groups, after which we returned to the larger group to present our ideas about ending hate at Dartmouth. This was yet another well-intentioned beginning to the cycle of the campus' reaction: hysterical outcry, followed by diminished interest, followed by silence until the next incident. Another meeting was scheduled for a week later, but this time it was in 101 Collis and 20 students attended, instead of the 200 that had been at the Roth Center. Several weeks, and several more meetings came and went, and still the group dwindled. Soon, there were three of us left: Marene Jennings '98, James Gallo '99 and me.
(06/14/98 9:00am)
We have banned the G-word (the event we are attending today) and the A-word (what we become after the G-word.) We have had sappy conversations and teary trips down Memory Lane. We have watched each other spend a year (and especially the Spring) adjusting to the idea of Graduation. We have watched each other cope in our own fashion: Some of us have taken the Ledyard Challenge, while others have streaked the Green, the Reserves, and the Hanover Inn; some have imbibed too much, or acquired tattoos, or just behaved as juveniles, to prove that we are not yet adults, will not be adults, refuse to be adults. And yet, for all of our efforts, time has not stopped, the world has not ceased spinning, and June 14th has still arrived.
(04/03/98 10:00am)
I spent one Saturday a long while back in the basement of Chi Heorot fraternity. Four of us -- a close female friend of mine and two guy friends -- were talking, just passing the time on an average Dartmouth night out.
(11/21/96 11:00am)
Last year the '99s seemed like new play things -- an endless selection of students to look at tenderly and say, "ah, not so long ago ... "
(11/06/96 11:00am)
At least from an off-campus perspective, Dartmouth's mascot seems to be the pressing issue of the term. Moose? Mountaineers? Indians? Kermits? Big Green Slimes? Opinions and suggestions abound, as does criticism of the group that is attempting to bring a new mascot to The Big Green. In a recent issue of The Dartmouth, Anat Levtov '98 disparaged the move to find a new mascot when there are more pressing issues at hand ["The Next Project for Dartmouth," Oct. 21, 1996]. Levtov is both correct and in error.
(03/03/95 11:00am)
It seems that since the resignation of Danielle Moore '95 as student body president this past fall, everyone wants to discuss the role of women at Dartmouth. I spent the first five months of my tenure here going through what they call transition and watching this ongoing conversation and debate. I'd say that at this point I'm about as adjusted as I'm going to get, so if all of you on that bandwagon will move over, I'm ready to put in my two cents.
(09/23/94 9:00am)
When I entered high school, I felt naive, clueless, and a little bit like someone had pasted a big yellow smiley face on my forehead that only I couldn't see. Upperclassmen treated many freshmen as if we were not only lowerclassmen, but lower class as well.