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(07/12/02 9:00am)
The 2001-02 Ivy League basketball season is long over, and the 2002-03 season is months away from beginning. But out in the vast reaches of cyberspace, under names like "Big Red Fan," "Bleeding Green," "Roar Lion Roar," and "Eli Yale," some of the League's most passionate fans are still debating the merits of their favorite teams.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
By virtue of a science experiment gone wrong, you are transported to Britain in the late 19th century. Her Majesty, the Queen of England and Empress of India, has recently transferred you to the subcontinent. During your third day as governor, a married man dies near your place of residence. The tradition of the natives is to burn the living widow of the husband on his funeral pyre. If you had been that British regent in India, would you permit the natives to burn the widow of a man who had just died at the funeral?
(07/12/02 9:00am)
The Dartmouth Medical School will welcome a new chair to its department of psychiatry in the coming Fall. Dr. Alan Green, currently an associate professor of psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, has been appointed to the position, and will officially assume his new role in the DMS community on November 15.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
This week, approximately 30 rising high-school sophomores from underfunded public schools in major Northeastern cities will participate in Dartmouth's second annual Summer Enrichment at Dartmouth program.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
A group from officials from Dartmouth, the Dresden School Board and the Hanover Board of Selectmen have drawn up a proposal that will allow Hanover High School to stay at its current location on Lebanon Street in Hanover and will allow the construction of a new middle school on a Dartmouth-owned property on Reservoir Road.
(07/12/02 9:00am)
Despite a spate of conflict in recent years, Tubestock 2002 now has a set date, unofficial support from a network of students and an informal clean-up crew.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
I'm sitting in a pub back home in the United Kingdom. When my friends hear that I'm studying on exchange at Dartmouth for the summer, they begin to get very excited.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
Monday afternoon was supposed to be a fun day in the world of baseball. The home run derby was set to provide some post-July 4th fireworks and the rest of baseball had the day off. But into this blissful day of hardball heaven, came the the two most painful words in baseball (just ahead of Bill Buckner and Bucky Dent): strike date.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
In recent years, All-Star contests in professional sports have been dismissed by many as being meaningless. The Pro Bowl takes place a week after the Super Bowl, when interest in football is fairly low. The NHL's All-Star game has been revived somewhat by its "North America vs. The World" format, but still attracts only marginal interest in non-Olympic years. It is unlikely however, that an All-Star contest has ever \seemed so inconsequential as last night's Major League Baseball All-Star game, given the events that surrounded this year's edition of the "Midsummer Classic."
(07/10/02 9:00am)
The great sophomore migration is in progress. The destination: Unknown. I gradually became aware of our dwindling numbers upon my return from a spring semester FSP in Washington D.C. Every time I went into Food Court, for every one person I recognized, there were at least four more people that I didn't know. While some of this can be attributed to the fact that there are summer programs going on and I don't know every member of the '04 class, I still found it slightly disconcerting not to see many familiar faces.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
In spite of a nationally growing gender discrepancy between women and men enrolling in college and receiving bachelor degrees, Dartmouth's gender ratio has remained balanced and constant for the past few years.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
Giuseppe Manzotta, a professor of Italian literature at Yale University, spoke yesterday on the ways in which humans receive moral knowledge through art in Dante's "Purgatorio."
(07/10/02 9:00am)
Dartmouth '04's may have been surprised to find they are not as alone on campus during this Summer term as they thought they would be.
(07/10/02 9:00am)
The Student Assembly yesterday announced plans to move forward with a campus-wide discussion of experiences with the new door locks system, to be held this Friday evening at the Collis Center. Despite Student Body President and Summer Chair Janos Marton '04's previous reference to the state of locking system as a "travesty," the Assembly's outlook this week took a more diplomatic tone.
(07/08/02 9:00am)
The theme of this year's summer and fall movie seasons probably won't be originality -- with "Star Wars'" second episode and Ben Affleck's debut as Jack Ryan already in theaters and new chapters in the "Austin Powers," "Harry Potter" and "Lord of the Rings" series on the horizon, 2002's release schedule is packed with sequels.
(07/08/02 9:00am)
This summer's World Cup tournament was a huge success, with renewed global interest in soccer, particularly in the U.S., after their stunning advance through the tournament. Arguably, it was the many upsets and surprises that established this World Cup as one of the most memorable in recent history, as South Korea and Turkey's presence in the semifinals can attest to. But besides Brazil and their Penta, or 5th Cup victory, there were many other winners at this tournament, and quite a few losers.
(07/08/02 9:00am)
Editor's note: This is the third in a series of articles profiling members of the Class of 2004 on Dartmouth varsity sports teams.
(07/08/02 9:00am)
To The Editor:
(07/08/02 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/08/02 9:00am)
This recent July 4th, our Independence Day, was a strange one for us. For the