The Time is Now
To the Editor:
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I'm a conservationist. I love the outdoors, or
I sit hunched over my keyboard staring out
Mohamad Bydon '02 spoke to approximately 60 students at Theta Delta Chi fraternity on Tuesday about Middle Eastern culture and America's campaign against terrorism.
Computing Services is getting ready to test a new piece of software that will change the printing procedure in the hopes of reducing waste.
In a joint effort to increase campus consciousness of sexuality issues, the Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Questioning Ally group and other student organizations have declared October to be National Coming Out Month at Dartmouth.
Though they were recently shy about traveling to the Upper Valley due to safety issues raised by the Sept. 11 tragedy, tourists known as "leaf peepers" are once again roaming the streets of Hanover.
The majority of this term's Language Study Abroad and Foreign Study Programs are proceeding as planned, but as tensions abroad escalate, the future of overseas academics in sensitive areas is being questioned.
K. Barry Sharpless '63 was named a co-winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in chemistry for his work in developing new molecular synthesis techniques critical to the creation of new drugs.
People express themselves in countless ways. Through writing, through music, through painting, through the sports they play, people search for and cultivate their own identities. But do these identities evolve in a vacuum, or are they instead deeply embedded in one's own complex history?
The theater fills with an energetic sound that resonates throughout the building. As the lights slowly dim, a symphony of rhythm and harmony emanates from the stage. The audience captivated by the unique blend of pop, R&B, and jazz that begins to filter through the audience.
BOSTON " Ray Bourque was immortalized as the Boston Bruins retired his number 77 before their home opener against the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. Bourque is now one of just eight Bruins' legends to have his number hanging from the rafters.
The Boston University Terriers did all they could yesterday afternoon to give the Dartmouth field hockey team's fans at Scully-Fahey Field something to cheer about. That is, every Terrier but one, goalkeeper Susan Harrington, who deserves the game ball for holding the Big Green scoreless for a 1-0 BU victory.
It isn't hard to elicit a positive opinion about Ashley Dean '02. Just ask anyone who plays alongside the volleyball tri-captain.
To the Editor:
It was my 21st birthday, a time to revel in my new freedoms. Instead I worried about freedoms I had already taken for granted and endured one of the most harrowing experiences of my life -- and nothing even happened.
2:30, early Saturday morning. The air smelled like fall. I was walking (not inebriated), and I saw a woman sitting on the curb, staring blankly at the street. Her hair was highlighted by streaks of gray shining in the streetlight, and she sat hunched over and weary like an exhausted hiker. Her jacket was light gray, matching the street, and her shoes were scuffed and white. No one else was there; nothing made a sound except the thud of my feet hitting the sidewalk and the soundtrack of high-pitched, drunken laughter in the background. I had no reason to stop for this woman, or otherwise acknowledge her presence, except that she spun her head and looked at me, and watched me as I approached. I slowed and stopped inside the halo of stained-urine streetlight as she continued to look intently, as if she expected something or wanted something from me. I stood momentarily, looking at her. Finally I said, "Are you O.K.?"
Last week I wore a t-shirt to class that read