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(05/22/98 9:00am)
The one-and-a-half-hour KeyServer shut-down at Kiewit Wednesday night prevented Microsoft Excel access for several hours, creating difficulties for students requiring the software for midterms and projects.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
The College is in an increasingly difficult position to fill the requests of student groups seeking space, as more and more apply.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
New York University Law Professor Vicki Been discussed the claim that poor and minority communities are often hosts to hazardous waste sites in a classroom-style lecture yesterday afternoon in the Rockefeller Center.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
Most students who live in Butterfield, the College's lone substance-free affinity house, say it differs only slightly from other residence halls at Dartmouth.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
Anyone who hikes the Dartmouth Outing Club trails this Memorial Day weekend will be able to thank Cabin and Trail and chainsaw crews from local forest services for the condition of the trails.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
Americans who look back to the 1950s as a time to emulate for its 'family values' are basing their nostalgia on myth, social historian Stephanie Coontz said in a speech to about 80 people in 105 Dartmouth last night.
(05/22/98 9:00am)
John Berry '44, whose monetary contributions financed the Berry Library project and construction of the John W. Berry Sports Center, died at the age of 75 on Wednesday after a four-month illness.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Memorial Day weekend is looming on the horizon and the latest crop of summer movies is poised to fill up the screens at the local cineplex. The following is what looks like the most promising films of the summer.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Tomorrow marks the beginning of the annual Eleanor Frost Play Festival here at Dartmouth College. The Festival has been going on for 71 years running and is one of the greatest expositions of artistic talent we have here.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Rebecca Dirksen '00 and Allison Taff '00 come from opposite ends of the country. They have different styles of tennis and they bring different attitudes towards the game. They don't even agree on what clothes to wear in warm weather or who should answer which questions. That seems what you should expect from the tall, blonde girl from California wearing the dress and the talkative, brown-haired Easterner whose long sleeves refuse to admit the sun is shining.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
With graduation so near, I have had the wonderful opportunity to attend several student thesis presentations this spring term. Wow! What interesting projects my fellow students have pursued over the course of the year! How special that I, a student uneducated in Japanese politics or consumer safety or Mexico, could enter a library or conference room for one hour and find myself completely engaged in this new material. Each presentation that I attended forced me to open my mind and educational experience. It was very important for me to respect the interests of my friends even if I could not relate to their academic pursuits. Generally I consider myself to be an open-minded person. But in listening to my friends, I realized two things about myself and the quality of my education at Dartmouth: I know very little, and I don't know a lot. Now, this doesn't mean that I am stupid, for I have a higher esteem of myself than that; but I have been astonished by the amount of knowledge that exists in the world that I cannot begin to grasp. There is so much to tap into in our universe and yet never enough time to pursue each and every interest. What if I lived to 100 and had never discovered Paul Klee? What if I died tomorrow without having heard Vivaldi's Four Seasons? What if I never read John Irving or visited Mount Sinai or learned how to say sauerkraut in French?
(05/21/98 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(05/21/98 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Their desks are lined with coffee cups. Their second homes are narrow rooms in the stacks. They have eye strain and carpal tunnel syndrome. They somehow get by on just a few hours of sleep a day. They are the thesis writers.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Dr. C. Everett Koop '37 called yesterday's defeat of an amendment that would hold tobacco companies liable for the health problems caused by smoking "a sellout to the most horrible crooks in the world."
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Jonathan Kenyon '97, who was arrested last month for assaulting a sophomore female and for pulling the fire alarm in Zimmerman residence hall, was tried at the Lebanon District Court yesterday on a charge of simple assault and fined $500.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Sophomores will be joined by strangers this summer -- the admissions office is currently selecting students to attend the College as transfer students. These students, usually from the East Coast, come to Dartmouth because few schools offer summer classes, or have fewer offerings.
(05/21/98 9:00am)
Teams of Safety and Security and student monitors will inspect Greek house basements for underage drinkers and crowding, among other violations, according to the Coed, Fraternity, and Sorority Council's revised social event procedures, which will be enacted at the end of this month.
(05/20/98 9:00am)
Perhaps anticipating the bad reviews it is likely to receive, "Godzilla" features two bumbling characters, one obese and named Ebert, the other bald and named Gene, who just don't seem to understand the monster. This witty in-joke turns out to be one of the only few genuinely humorous moments in a surprisingly dark and leaden film.
(05/20/98 9:00am)
When trying to assess the Big Green men's crew performance at Eastern Sprints this past weekend, one needs to look no further than the sentiments of men's crew coach Scott Armstrong: