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(07/22/02 9:00am)
A network of students working through Dartmouth Habitat for Humanity will for the first time take on the primary role in providing an Upper Valley family with a new home this summer and fall, with construction tentatively scheduled to kick off this week.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
At 154 minutes and French to boot, "Celine and Julie Go Boating" ('Cline et Julie vont en bateau,' 1974) is a bit much for any reviewer to expect a reader to run out and see, which is probably too bad.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
The past two seasons of Dartmouth men's hockey have seen the Big Green skaters begin to reap the benefits of an upward trend that began five years ago with the hiring of Bob Gaudet '81 as head coach. Gaudet returned to Hanover after a successful coaching career at Brown that saw the Bears win two Ivy League titles.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
The Widow's question is an excellent one ("The Widow's Challenge Part II," July 16.). The contradictions of the world are many. Mr. Stevenson, you want the reader to think to take a stand honestly, you just want him to care. Do we determine right from wrong and save the widow or become indifferent and allow her to die? I, Mr. Stevenson, would save the Widow because I value human life, all human life.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
This article is meant to be an extended addendum to what John Stevenson '05 said in his piece ("The Critical Examination," June 28). I would like to thank him for citing my previous article; I now return the favor by attempting to add to the multiculturalism debate that he calls for.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
When '04 Class Council President John "Doc" Kupiec's sent out his letter encouraging students to "demonstrate that we can be responsible adults" and thus ensure that Tubestock does not go the way of the Winter Carnival keg jump (gone, but far from forgotten), he intended to help save a tradition fighting for its very survival. The means by which Kupiec wishes to keep Tubestock up and running, however, threaten to alter the core character of the event.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
Does a postal worker's contraction of Legionnaire's Disease warrant an investigation of four local facilities in which he works?
(07/18/02 9:00am)
In spite of the prior debate surrounding its ratification, a new law requiring N.H. schools to set aside time for a recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance became effective yesterday.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
The opening of N.H. Governor and U.S. Senate candidate Jeanne Shaheen's campaign office in Lebanon yesterday brought together a number of prominent New Hampshire Democrats and also gave Shaheen an opportunity to clarify her position on several critical campaign issues, including the environment, the economy and reproductive rights.
(07/18/02 9:00am)
The limited dining choices of Summer term are a common source of complaint among Dartmouth students, but thanks to the collaborative efforts of Student Assembly and Dartmouth Dining Services, last week saw the beginning of a small but significant expansion in weekend on-campus food options.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
Three years ago Sam Mendes presented us with "American Beauty," a film that went on to win Oscars for Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Original Screenplay, Best Cinematography and Best Director. That's quite the accomplishment for Mr. Mendes's first foray into film. Now he follows that performance with "Road to Perdition."
(07/16/02 9:00am)
This weekend, all eyes will be on the British Open at Muirfield, Scotland as Tiger Woods attempts to do something that Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus never did: win the first three major golf tournaments in one year and take one step closer to that seemingly unattainable Grand Slam of golf.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/16/02 9:00am)
To The Editor:
(07/16/02 9:00am)
In part one of the Widow's Challenge, I spoke of the clash between liberal society and cultural relativism/ identity politic.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
As part of a state-wide effort to improve the economy of New Hampshire by promoting high-technology industries, Dartmouth has donated $700,000 worth of land towards the construction of a Dartmouth Regional Technology Center in Lebanon. The center will serve as a small business "incubator" that will provide a space for high-technology research companies to expand and commercialize their products.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
While Dartmouth may not have been an entirely welcoming environment for women in the early days of coeducation, several female students from the 1970s and before remembered their time at the College fondly, with relatively little mention of any tension between the sexes.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
Two Dartmouth faculty members, Jay Buckey of Dartmouth Medical School and James Carter, a researcher at Dartmouth's Interactive Media Lab, are developing unique software that will be used to help astronauts deal with varying psychological problems while in space.
(07/16/02 9:00am)
A Hanover man has been arrested and charged with simple assault and criminal threatening after he yelled a racial slur and shoved at least one teenager in Collis on July 3.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
Friends of Matthew Demaine '04, who unexpectedly died of cardiac arrest in his sleep last year, say that he was a talented artist who took his work very seriously, as is readily apparent from viewing a sample of his work currently on display at the Hopkins Center.