Search Was Executed of a Room in Tabard, Not the Entire House
To the Editor,
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To the Editor,
My first year at this school I anxiously attended graduation and said good-bye to a few good friends, but knew very well that life would go on without the Class of 1995. Last year, I missed graduation, but felt a more significant sense of loss than the year before if only because I had grown to respect and admire many members of the Class of 1996.
More than 100 members of Dartmouth's Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association gathered at the College to discuss "social, economic and political empowerment" and to celebrate the group's 25th anniversary.
A Dartmouth alumnus visiting Hanover for his 10-year reunion was arrested on Saturday at 5:50 p.m. for driving under the influence of alcohol on Tuck Drive near the River Cluster residence halls.
Four seniors described their honors theses to about 80 underclassmen at the College's first ever Academic Gala, which organizers say they hope will become an annual event.
Most graduating students seem content with the College's choice of Finnish Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen '64 as the keynote speaker at this year's Commencement ceremony, and almost all students said they were surprised by the choice.
The Student Assembly's parliamentarian, Simone Swink '98, declared last week's removal of Treasurer Dom LaValle '99 invalid Thursday night, and attempts to remove LaValle at last night's executive committee meeting proved unsuccessful.
The Ward Amidon Jewelry Store on Main St. was robbed at gunpoint Saturday afternoon by two unmasked men who threatened the clerks and escaped with jewelry and cash.
This Saturday at 8 p.m., the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra will present their spring concert in Spaulding auditorium. The program will consist of the "Symphonie Fantastique" of Hector Berlioz and Mozart's Symphony No. 29.
Wednesday evening's Chamber Singers performance of "For Lo, The Winter is Past" may not have impacted the weather but it did enliven the audience. Despite sporadic weaknesses in the overly lengthy program, the ensemble impressed the audience with their diverse arrangements and superb voices.
The good just keeps getting better for women's crew in the Great North Country.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
I was saddened by President Freedman's comment in the Tuesday issue of The Dartmouth that he withheld the announcement of our commencement speaker "so students would not protest for someone more famous." I was further dismayed to hear student reactions all day Tuesday. "Paavo who? Finland? What about Bill Cosby?" While I, like many of my classmates, would have liked to have seen a woman speaker at commencement, I am thrilled that Lipponen was chosen. I will admit my bias up front: I wrote my government thesis on Finnish foreign policy and did include remarks about Lipponen. As the campus expert on Finland, I would like to take this opportunity to explain why Lipponen is not only a wonderful choice as speaker, but an impressive world leader.
Several student publications that received an infusion of extra money a few months ago from the Committee on Student Organizations were all able to publish at least one issue this term.
A task force on undergraduate social life created Fall term by Dean of the College Lee Pelton released the report of its recommendations earlier this week -- calling for later hours and more creative use of space in College buildings on weekends, diversification of social options and the creation of a residential Common House or Unity House.
This weekend the Black Alumni of Dartmouth Association will celebrate the 25th anniversary of its founding with a large gathering of African-American alumni of the College.
A search warrant executed by Keene Police at The Tabard co-ed fraternity on May 13 resulted in the seizure of a 21-year-old male Dartmouth student's computer after a police officer posing as a 14-year-old boy recorded a conversation he had with the student in an Internet chat room called "boylove&chat."
The 70th Annual Frost Play Festival returns to the stage tonight. The festival consists of a series of plays created entirely by Dartmouth students responsible for the writing, direction and performance of the works.
Music Professor Ted Levin is providing Dartmouth with a unique glance at the world of music and ethnomusicology -- a world that has motivated a fascinating life and has inspired all of his students.