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(10/25/10 2:00am)
In general, I support any writing that advocates for women's or victims' empowerment. However, as a feminist and active promoter of sexual assault awareness and prevention, I cannot fully back Thursday's article by Natalie Colaneri '12 ("Empowering Victims," Oct. 20).
(10/25/10 2:00am)
Reading the op-ed pages of America's left-of-center newspapers, it would seem that the Republican Party is being overrun by angry, homophobic, anti-immigrant crackpots. For centrists like me who believe in the importance of having two sane national parties, this would be a terribly depressing prospect. But, just when one could be forgiven for thinking that all hope is lost, Fred Karger comes to the rescue.
(10/25/10 2:00am)
The Dartmouth football team (4-2, 1-2 Ivy) won its first Ivy League game of the season on Saturday, defeating Columbia University (3-3, 1-2 Ivy) in its Homecoming game, 24-21, despite fumbling three times in the fourth quarter. It is the first time the Big Green has won a conference game on the road in its last 14 tries.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
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The 2010 "State of College Admission" report of theNational Association for College Admission Counseling found that 47 percent of colleges reported an increase in early decision applications for 2009. More than half of the colleges with an early decision policy admitted more students from the early decision applicant pool, making early applications more attractive, the report found. Early decision programs have been frequently criticized for favoring elite students able to start the college selection process early and who do not need to compare financial aid awards from various colleges, and several colleges have eliminated the process entirely. Early decision is still not a dominant application method, as only 7 percent of total applications at colleges with this option came from early decision applicant pools. The report also found a rise in proportion of online applications, future possibility of reduced selectivity in colleges and the rise in "demonstrated interest in enrolling" as a new important factor in getting admission.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Many of the fears associated with cyber crimes which have become an integral part of our daily lives are in fact culturally construed, David Wall, a professor of criminology at Durham University in England, said in a lecture Thursday.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
A former Marine and construction worker, Howie Hawkins '75 has spent the last decade unloading trucks for UPS. But Hawkins is now vying for a new position governor of New York. Hawkins, a Green Party candidate from Albany, N.Y., wants to invest heavily in renewable, clean energy, Mark Dunlea, Hawkins's senior adviser, said.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Plouffe also implored students to vote on Nov. 2, hoping to cut into the high voter enthusiasm that Republicans saw in primary elections earlier this year.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Legendary American painter and sculptor Frank Stella explained his series of abstract paintings, "Irregular Polygons," emphasizing the flatness in his work and highlighting how the thick bands of color surrounding geometric shapes created illusions of dimensionality in a flat space, in a lecture on Thursday.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
The College has appointed Rosi Kerr '98 as its new director of sustainability, according to an announcement from College Provost Carol Folt.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Procurment Update
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Pick a topic: The College's ban on local sororities; Hanover Police's attack on Greek life and the Good Samaritan policy; the pervasive threat of sexual assault; class oversubscription; an ineffective residential life policy; the lingering consequences of budget cuts. All of these problems have huge ramifications on the quality of every student's hallowed "Dartmouth Experience." And people care about them, but they don't take enough meaningful action to confront them. What are the issues students have recently self-organized to address instead? Making the Homecoming bonfire more welcoming ("Group works to improve bonfire," Oct. 15) and reinstating swimming at the Connecticut River docks.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
In addition to the nipping cold and the drifting leaves, the sight of Dartmouth tour guides leading packs of eager applicants and parents is a telling sign that the never-ending college admission cycle is in session. And now that I am a Dartmouth student, I have the luxury of viewing these potential prospies with a mix of pity and haughty disdain. Yet within the vast crowd, one student tourist particularly stood out, solely by his tactless choice of outerwear: a Brown University sweater.