Dartmouth students volunteer for Senate candidates
As the tightly-contested New Hampshire senatorial race begins to heat up, several Dartmouth students have donated their time to assist candidates in their campaigns.
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As the tightly-contested New Hampshire senatorial race begins to heat up, several Dartmouth students have donated their time to assist candidates in their campaigns.
Over 750 relatives of members of the class of 2004 are expected on campus for this year's annual Sophomore Family Weekend.
Just two days after Israeli forces killed 15 during an airstrike in Gaza City, columnist and editorial board member for the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz Danny Rubinstein spoke out against efforts to solve the current conflict through military action.
Yale University filed a complaint with the FBI yesterday, alleging that admissions officers from Princeton University hacked into a Yale admissions Web site.
What do you get when you stick Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson in a cursed submarine that is about to kill its crew? An exciting ride. Not exactly an emotional roller-coaster of suspense -- more of a very fun slip'n'slide that safely plops you on the grass.
Major League baseball is in trouble. Vegas oddsmakers have set 5-7 odds in favor of a work stoppage and 1-1 odds on the World Series being played this year. With these disturbing possibilities in our minds, the nation's pastime is closing in on it's most critical stretch: the upcoming trade deadline followed by the late summer stretch run.
In my piece entitled "The Widow's Challenge, Part I", I critiqued the liberal side of the Christian faith that emphasizes social justice and community service over absolute devotion to a Person. By reader response through email and in person (all of which I highly recommend), my comments on what I termed the "liberal side of the faith" were not as clear as they could be.
The contemporary movement for reparations over slavery and the exploitation of African Americans is too often thought of as being only about money, said Professor Robin D.G. Kelley in a Montgomery Fellowship lecture yesterday afternoon.
Accomplished television and film writer Walter Bernstein '40 will visit Dartmouth tomorrow to lecture and see a screening of his 1964 movie "Fail-Safe."
When asked about the possible outcome of the New Hampshire Republican Senate primary, Rockefeller Center Director Linda Fowler replied, "This is a race that smart people don't make predictions about."
For Professor Robin D.G. Kelley, scholarship is not about accolades. To him the study of the conditions and lives of the working class is about envisioning a different future.
Well two out of three ain't bad. The British media hype machine was dead on when they proclaimed The Strokes as the next big thing. And you couldn't blame them for gushing over The Hives' "Vini Vidi Vicious," a gritty punk powerhouse that permeates a classic CBGBs scent (certainly not the actual odor of the seminal Bowery club).
Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles profiling members of the Class of 2004 on Dartmouth varsity sports teams.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
In just a few short months, the American people will once again fall victim to one of the cruelest and all-too usual forms of torture in existence. I'm not talking about President Bush opening his mouth to speak or Britney Spears teaming up with Eminem to release a hit single entitled "I'm Not A Girl, Not Yet A Woman, So I'm Gonna Put A Cap In Yo' Ass. Na Na Na Na Na."
The Dartmouth class of 2004 is experimenting with off-campus housing as a convenient and sometimes cheaper alternative to College housing.
Most Americans wouldn't regard the Balkan nation of Albania -- among the poorest countries in Europe -- as an alluring place to visit. Not Xander Meise '01.
Christian Hummel '01 hadn't intended to travel to Croatia as part of his Fulbright scholarship, but, as a student with a longstanding interest in the Balkans, was hardly disappointed with the change.