Dartmouth is About Trust
To the Editor:
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I rolled eight cigarettes in my 10 o'clock economics class. As my professor babbled on about bar graphs (and misused "facile" for which I sic'd her in my notes), my attention was lost in a swirl of rich smoke. I roamed in flavor country, oblivious to all else.
Like many people, I have only experienced the disaster of Sept. 11 vicariously, through the electronic and paper media. It seems guilty to affirm that one of the images that went through my head as I saw the Trade Center burn was an image of my stock portfolio, gone in a microsecond as each tower collapsed into a heap of rubble and the human cost made itself horribly clear, live on CNN. Yet other people's pain would strike me in a very real way the following Monday.
I was at home in New Jersey when the attacks occurred, and after 11 months in Germany, I encountered a United States so different from the one that I had imagined in occasional bouts of homesickness.
I've listened to friends decide to go to medical school because they want to help humanity and make their lives worthwhile. So many Drama majors, Studio Art majors, Creative Writing majors sit around and agonize over the selfishness of their arts; they worry that they're ignoring opportunities to do something more.
Faculty at Dartmouth can give a lot of answers to questions about what the United States will do in Afghanistan, but they can't give them all.
National safety concerns prevented Russian professor Jennifer Tishler and her students from boarding a flight to Russia on Sept. 11. A pair of robberies in St. Petersburg kept them grounded for good.
One of Dartmouth's oldest student service organizations, Palaeopitus, is ready to start furthering their goals for this year, with their newest members.
Last night in Cutter Shabazz a gathering of Greek presidents voted to officially replace the Coed Fraternity Sorority Council (CFSC) with the Greek Leaders Council.
Susan Lichtman's exhibit of mostly recent oils on linen, "21 Small Paintings," shows in the Hopkins Center's Upper Jewett Corridor (the hallways on either side of the Hinman mailboxes) through the middle of October.
We all wish our lives had a theme-song -- or at least musical interludes between the serious-sounding appointments. Our wishes do not come true. For NPR personalities, however, they do.
To the Editor:
To the Dartmouth Class of 2005: you will soon understand what makes this place so special. Sometime between now and Thanksgiving break you will likely discover the Dartmouth spirit. If history is any indication, you may also find that same Dartmouth spirit under attack by persons attempting to change the essence of our College, to make us more similar to our competitor schools. Someone will need to stand up to these paternalistic influences, to preserve the uniqueness of Dartmouth. As the most energetic class on campus, this burden will likely fall to you.
It's nice to feel wanted. There're about forty
More than 150 people crowded Filene Auditorium on Friday afternoon for a lecture by Israeli journalist Danny Rubinstein.