Student followed to apartment
An unidentified man allegedly followed a female student from Collis Center to her apartment behind the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity late Monday night, then entered her apartment unannounced.
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An unidentified man allegedly followed a female student from Collis Center to her apartment behind the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity late Monday night, then entered her apartment unannounced.
After two months of deliberations, the Inter-Fraternity Council has for the first time issued men's Fall term rush guidelines to add structure to and identify problems with the current men's rush system - creating minimum numerical requirements for bids offered from each fraternity.
There is a famous story about a scientist who removes all of the legs from a frog and asks it to jump. When the frog, inevitably, does not jump, the scientist writes in his notebook, "With no legs, frog is deaf."
I am a victim of hate. Returning to my dorm on what was supposed to be a festive Green Key Saturday (I was admittedly inebriated after several rounds of herbal tea at the Green Bean Cafe) I stumbled onto a cesspool of hatred. High and proud there hangs a bumper sticker on my door, proclaiming to all, "The Indian Will Never Die." Yet, on this fateful night, I saw my harmless sticker defaced, the words "Die, Die" scrawled on it with MY dry-erase marker. As if that wasn't enough, a (rather poor) attempt was made to tear the sticker off.
Hollywood will come a bit closer to Dartmouth this year as Kamran Pasha - Dartmouth '93, Tuck '00 - begins production of his occult thriller "Silver Cord" which will be partially filmed in Hanover and may star Dartmouth students.
Richard Nixon worked very hard but never seemed to enjoy it, often seemed uncomfortable around people, had an inferiority complex and was cynical and anti-Semitic, former executive editor of the Washington Post Ben Bradlee said in a speech mixing anecdotal analysis and humor for a filled Cook Auditorium yesterday.
After months of meetings following the announcement of the Trustees Five Principles, the student-led Working Groups are now preparing their final proposals for social and residential change that they will submit to the College.
The final members of the Trustees' influential Steering Committee were announced yesterday, signaling the beginning of the powerful committee's work of weeding through proposals on the controversial Five Principles and presenting a recommended implementation plan to the full Board of Trustees.
Remember the days of frivolous relationship game shows like "The Newlywed Game," where couples would reveal eachother's peccadilloes on national television? Well, the days of light-hearted relationship gripes on television have been replaced by Jerry Springer-inspired callousness, with couples vying to expose the most raunchy and embarrassing details of their significant others.
To the Editor:
Fearing that this past weekend might be my last "big" weekend at Dartmouth due to the Social and Residential Initiative, I wanted to write a scathing column that mocked the Trustees and their illogical decisions while defending the Greek system that I wholeheartedly support. But I was too busy getting sloshed and having fun. And that's the way it should be.
A friend recently told me that 75 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot. I, in response, employing many valuable statistics of my own, called her a big stupid liar. She then changed her answer to 72 percent, and we both agreed that this was much more believable.
Professor and Chairman of Pediatrics and the Medical Director of Children's Hospital at Dartmouth Dr. John Brooks was rushed to the emergency room Thursday May 13 after a serious automobile accident with a moose.
A few years after The Washington Post uncovered the Watergate scandal that led to Richard Nixon's resignation, the movie "All the President's Men" told the newspaper's story with a tone that offered high praise to the journalists and their ethics.
Health advocate Dr. Jeffrey Wigand, who rose to national prominence as the highest-ranking tobacco industry executive to address smoking and health issues to the public on news program "60 Minutes," related his insider experience, lambasted a "very sleazy, powerful, smart" business and described abuses such as public misinformation and youth-oriented marketing last night in the Collis Commonground.
Martin Feldstein, professor of Economics at Harvard and head of the National Bureau of Economic Research, presented his proposal for funding Social Security yesterday in a speech titled "Reforming Social Security."
The New York Police department has attributed the death of recent graduate Leo Park '97 to suicide and has closed the case.
The Dartmouth's men's track and field team finished second at the New England Championships held this Friday and Saturday at the University of Maine.
To the Editor:
I'm sure that I wasn't the only one who smelled the desperation in the air last week when an avalanche of Student Assembly blitzes filled my in-box pleading with me to vote. Outgoing Student Assembly President Josh Green implored us to raise our collective voice with talk of the need for a high voter turnout in order to validate both student opinion and the position of whomever we would place on the Steering Committee. But voter turnout, as I was notified by yet-another SA blitz, was low. A surprise? No.