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(10/29/98 11:00am)
Muslim feminist Riffat Hassan discussed women's rights in the Islamic world and said commonly used religious reasons for Muslim gender inequality are unfounded in a speech last night in 105 Dartmouth Hall titled "Muslim Women's Rights in the Context of Religious Pluralism."
(10/29/98 11:00am)
For those fans of the World Wrestling Federation who mourn the current scarcity of cable television at Dartmouth, your prayers have been answered -- the Programming Board is considering bringing live world-class wrestling to Dartmouth on the last day of classes, Dec. 2.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
The Big Green Equestrian Team faced a doubleheader this past weekend, competing at the University of Vermont Saturday, and then turning around to compete at Middlebury College on Sunday. It was a busy weekend for the equestrians, but they turned in two solid performances.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
The Ivy League pre-season media basketball polls were released over the weekend placing the women third and the men seventh in the Ivy League, but you wouldn't know that by asking either men's head basketball coach Dave Faucher or women's coach Chris Wielgus.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
On Friday night, a terrible tragedy occurred. A man was fatally shot in his home by a sniper in the nearby woods. Dr. Barnett Slepian was an abortion provider in Amherst, New York.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
It is quite evident that Dartmouth has plenty of activities to offer its students. On a given night, a student can catch a movie at the Hop, listen to a speaker at Rocky or even go swing dancing at Collis. There is one thing a student can't do, though. The activity, which is done by millions of Americans every night, is watching cable TV.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
Last night on the phone, my mom asked me whether I was taking my vitamins and I hastily answered, "Yes, yes, of course," even though the vitamin bottles have not been opened since last March. It is only October; it is not yet time to get ill.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
David Palmeter, a trade lawyer and president of the Washington Foreign Law Society, emphasized the differences between the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and the World Trade Organization in a presentation yesterday afternoon in 2 Rockefeller.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
Two 1997 Dartmouth graduates will make appearances on NBC's "Caroline in the City" television series this fall.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
As they sit in a room on the second floor of Dick's House, certain College employees can open doors located across campus.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
After one of the most spirited debates of the term, the Student Assembly voted last night to give back $5,000 of its $30,000 allocation from the Undergraduate Finance Council in an effort to urge the College to better fund student organizations.
(10/28/98 11:00am)
Although Dartmouth's Reserve Officer Training Corps program is low on membership and its supervisor left last spring, Cadet Captain Eric Eckberg '99 says the program will not fold.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
India Queen restaurant, located at 44 South Main Street (on the back side of the Campion's building), is Hanover's second-youngest restaurant, but its traditional Indian flavor makes it one of downtown's best.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
Stories about the bad luck of others fascinate people, perhaps because we hope to be immune to the same disasters ourselves. Ken Smith, author of "Raw Deal Horrible and Ironic Stories of Forgotten Americans," thinks there's even more to our intrigue.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
The Dartmouth men's water polo team defeated Trinity College, Wesleyan University and Yale University this weekend en route to its second New England Club Water Polo championship in three years, securing a bid to the National Club Water Polo championships tournament to be held in two weeks time.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
Just how costly was the Big Green's loss at Cornell this weekend? Well, depending on how you look at it, either very costly or not very costly at all. With Penn and Princeton falling to Brown and Harvard to drop from the ranks of the unbeaten, Dartmouth still remains just one game back of first place despite their 1-2 mark in league play. However, if the Big Green had managed to pull out a victory, they would be in first-place in the league, albeit in a five-way tie for the top spot.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
The Dartmouth field hockey squad experienced both ends of a 2-0 decision this weekend as the Big Green topped Cornell on Friday before dropping a non-league match to Syracuse University on Sunday. The Big Green are now 6-6 overall, 2-3 Ivy League.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
You have to admire someone who can decry the oversimplification of his views on the one hand, and then write something like, "The conservative requires you to have faith in God, the liberal replaces "God" with "the state" or "society" [The Dartmouth, "A Few Good (Straw) Men: Part II," Oct. 21]. Robert Sutton fancies himself so ingenious and insightful, he thinks that he alone has pierced through the intellectual haze the government has placed around modern political issues. In reality, the unpopularity of Sutton's world view can be attributed to a far more mundane cause. Simply put, for the first 150 years of this country's existence, its economy was guided by precisely the laissez-faire values Sutton so admires. The result was a culture so steeped in misery that the people demanded a more interventionist government.
(10/27/98 11:00am)
It is with great pride and pleasure and a crystal awareness of the irony involved that I accept the distinction of being the first student who suffers a personal attack from the Dartmouth Review for the 1998-99 academic year. The mud-slinging took the form of an item in the first issue's "Week in Review," plainly titled, "How Horrible is Bill Kartalopoulos?"
(10/27/98 11:00am)
"There's a leaf on the floor ... how did it get there? I wonder who left a leaf on my floor!"