Alternative medicine discussed
"More than one-third of Americans are turning to alternative forms of health care," Dr. David Eisenberg, a Harvard Medical School instructor, said at the 12th annual Helmut Schumann Lecture last night.
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"More than one-third of Americans are turning to alternative forms of health care," Dr. David Eisenberg, a Harvard Medical School instructor, said at the 12th annual Helmut Schumann Lecture last night.
The members of Union 560 yesterday approved the College's latest contract offer by a vote of 178 to 67.
It is time once again to break out the face paint, gather up those extra rolls of toilet paper and prepare to do the Time Warp. This Saturday night marks the return to the College of the longest running cult film phenomenon in Hollywood history. This Hanover Halloween weekend, "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" will grace Webster Hall on Oct. 29. at 10 p.m.
At a public forum held Tuesday at Hanover's elementary school, officials from the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Civil Rights criticized the school district's handling of a sexual harassment case.
After a long season of hill intervals, pool workouts and long distance runs, the women's cross country team will be put to the ultimate test on Friday when it will travel to Van Cortlandt Park in New York, N.Y. to compete in the prestigious Heptagonal Championship.
Although the women's golf team did not meet its goal of placing in the top half of the pack at last weekend's Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference tournament, the Big Green managed to hit a team low on the second day of play, collectively shooting a nine hole score of 345 on the Pennsylvania State University Blue Coarse.
To the Editor:
Tuesday afternoon, as I sat watching a public forum at the Bernice A. Ray Elementary School in Hanover concerning an accusation of sexual harassment, I was confronted with a new challenge to my ideas of community.
To highlight our societal ills and to engender change, many groups have co-opted speakouts/vigils as modes of publicizing and politicizing communities. Yesterday's speakout on the Green for domestic violence awareness week is a case in point. But instead of speaking out, in particular to a reporter of the school's daily newspaper, many of last night's participants choose instead to remain anonymous, shrouded in the darkness of the night. They asked the reporter not to print their names along with their stories.
Many Dartmouth students are shattering the myth that only grandmothers can spin yarn. The new craze on campus? Knitting.
About 40 people gathered in Rollins Chapel for a memorial service yesterday to commemorate the 22 victims of last week's terrorist bombing in Tel Aviv, Israel.
"I love medicine. I feel exhilarated when working with patients. I wouldn't change my life for anything," Paul Wilson Brand, a surgeon, said at the first ever John P. McGovern Lecture last night.
A group of more than 50 Dartmouth administrators, Hanover residents, professors and students participated in a Speak-Out/Vigil against domestic violence on the Green last night.
Josh Bloom '95, co-captain and inside line-backer of the Dartmouth football team, is one of 15 winners of an $18,000 scholarship for post-graduate study.
The men's and women's rowing teams returned from the biggest race of the fall, the Head of the Charles, relatively pleased with their performances given that the competition was not on the collegiate level, but an international one. The race included teams from Canada, Japan, Switzerland and Egypt.
Coach Barry Harwick and the Big Green harriers are making a trip to New York this weekend. They are hoping to return to Hanover with the Ivy League title in tow, adding yet another honor to their long list of accomplishments in this phenomenal season.
The world of school and college is such a luxury. I wake up in the morning and can choose whether I want to go to class or not. I can choose how hard I want to work and don't have to worry about losing my job as a student. Food, rent, and entertainment are at my fingertips with the flash of a green ID card.
Once college students took risks to speak out about their convictions. Our predecessors protested Vietnam and fought for divestment because they believed in human rights, and they sacrificed their convenience to demonstrate the depth of their commitment. One need only recall the students and professors who spent winter nights in shanties on the Green to comprehend the scope of the campus' concerns.
George Mosse, a history and Jewish studies professor at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, spoke yesterday about the evolution of masculine idealism, touching on the obstacle it poses to women and gays.
Danny Rubinstein, a renown Israeli journalist who spoke yesterday about the creation of the Arafat myth, encountered a mixture of criticism and praise from the 40-person audience.