Activist Harry Wu speaks on China
Speaking to a packed audience in 105 Dartmouth last night, Chinese-American human rights activist Harry Wu attacked the Communist regime of China for imprisoning and executing dissidents.
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Speaking to a packed audience in 105 Dartmouth last night, Chinese-American human rights activist Harry Wu attacked the Communist regime of China for imprisoning and executing dissidents.
Professors criticized the administration for ignoring the opinion of the Design Review Committee at a crowded meeting yesterday in which architects defended the plans for the proposed $50 million Berry Library.
The discussion of the recommendations of the College Committee on Alcohol and Other Drugs scheduled for this evening has been moved to Cook Auditorium to accommodate the large number of students expected to attend.
Many students yesterday were outraged over the recommendations of the College Committee on Alcohol and Other Drugs, which could bring sweeping changes to the College's social scene if implemented by Dean of the College Lee Pelton.
Massive metallic double doors dominate the stage. The combination of metal with stone already suggests the modern/classic duality of "The White Devil." When two men and a woman clad in tight black leather and wild eye makeup burst on stage and begin to pour forth 17th century language, this duality is confirmed. Director Paul Gaffney has molded John Webster's 1612 Jacobean revenge tragedy to suit a modern-day audience, illustrating that the theme of revenge is not limited to one time period.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass.--The Dartmouth Water Polo team emerged from relative obscurity this past weekend, surprising not only themselves but the entire Water Polo community by winning the National Club Championships at Williams College.
After two successful seasons, the men's and women's rugby clubs faced off in their respective playoffs over the weekend. The men earned a key victory over Norwich, 59-12, to propel them into the final round of the Northeast playoffs next week in Albany. The women's club fared just as well, taking second place in the Northeastern tournament at Boston. Their finish earned them a spot at Nationals in the spring.
The Big Green field hockey team finished their regular season with an impressive 6-0 victory over Ivy League foe Columbia. The game marked the third straight shutout for freshman goalie Brittany D'Augustine '01, a feat which equals Lauren Demski's three game shutout streak which finished the team's 1995 ECAC Championship season.
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One day in 1971, a group of female exchange students forcibly "coeducated" the sauna in the "for males only" part of the gymnasium to protest the College's lack of facilities for women.
While the current plans for the new Berry Library have some members of the faculty up in arms, students seem relatively unaware of the changes in store.
Joy Kenseth, the art history professor leading the movement to have the current plans for Berry Library modified, formally initiated a faculty petition yesterday, asking the College's Board of Trustees to halt action towards the construction of the library, which is currently scheduled to begin this spring.
Peace and civil rights activist William Sloane Coffin, this term's Montgomery Fellow, stressed the importance of love and compassion not just in people's personal lives, but also in service to the community at large in a speech last night in 105 Dartmouth Hall.
Safety and Security officers will once again be monitoring fraternity basements during parties and the number of kegs allowed at parties will be drastically reduced if Dean of the College Lee Pelton approves the alcohol policy recommendations of the College Committee on Alcohol and Other Drugs, which were released in a report to the campus this morning.
The visual arts of eighteenth-century France was a popular topic this weekend at the Hood Museum of Art. In a two-day symposium titled "Love and Enlightenment" seven art historians presented scholarly lectures on a variety of topics.
The highlights of the weekend were the two musical performances at Spaulding Auditorium by the World Music Percussion Ensemble and The Barbary Coast Jazz Ensemble.
'Starship Troopers' is the most gleefully stupid movie of the year, and certainly one of the most entertaining. It is a high-tech, sci-fi romp across the galaxy which is so blatantly cheesy you feel embarrassed for liking it so much.