Education students 'test the waters' in Marshall Islands
In the middle of the Pacific Ocean, on the one-mile-long island of Majuro, the blazing sun beats down on the backs of children clad in Dartmouth T-shirts.
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In the middle of the Pacific Ocean, on the one-mile-long island of Majuro, the blazing sun beats down on the backs of children clad in Dartmouth T-shirts.
Palaeopitus, a senior society that advises administrators and facilitates communication between campus organizations, has announced next year's members from the Class of 2003.
Editor's Note: This is the first in a two-part series examining the state of Israeli-Palestinian relations at Dartmouth and college campuses nationwide.
Phi Delta Alpha fraternity faces a good chance of being rerecognized next fall, as long as it complies with all guidelines set by the Office of Residential Life, former Phi Delt brothers told the Dartmouth.
In a groundbreaking decision after four years of ongoing deliberation, faculty approved implementation yesterday of a new world culture distributive requirement -- culture and identity.
Guster performed for a sold-out crowd in Leede Arena Friday night, combining humor and music for a delightful concert.
The Big Green women's lacrosse team's May 4 loss to Syracuse marked the end of the road for the Class of 2002, one of the most decorated classes in the team's history. The end of the seniors' playing careers was clearly not to be confused with the end of their honors, however, as the departing seniors have been given numerous individual awards since the end of the season.
Midterm elections in 2002 and the presidential election of 2004 loom large for President George W. Bush. While the president has reached out to many new and existing groups for support, there is one group that he has ignored but should invest time and energy in courting -- the homosexual community. It is in President Bush's electoral interest to reach out to homosexuals. More importantly, it is the right thing to do.
Complying with popular culture's media demands for carnal indulgence over content, People Magazine recently announced the 50 Most Beautiful People for this year, once again proving that for most people, articles with even allusions to sex really are more interesting than discussions of the major players during international crises.
This year's Green Key weekend witnessed a considerable rise in reported incidents, though no assaults or serious injuries occurred, according to Safety and Security.
Controversial Pulitzer Prize-winner Chris Hedges argued in a speech Friday that Palestinians choose to become "martyrs" in order to fight the "impotence" imposed on them by the Israeli government.
A campaign calling on the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University to withdraw their investments from Israel in protest of alleged human rights violations experienced a setback Thursday as Harvard President Lawrence Summers voiced opposition toward the movement.
Transcripts of prosecutors' interviews with James Parker released Friday offered disturbing insight into the events and motives leading up to the brutal murders of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop in January 2001.
Following in the footsteps of such journalistic luminaries as Mike Wallace, Barbara Walters and Ed Bradley, The Dartmouth's Mark Sweeney catches up with the big names on campus and asks the questions that others have too much professionalism or integrity to ask. This week: Sweeney plays Canadian doubles with tennis superstars Jayme Ahmed '05 and Lisa Borowsky '05.
On the water, a second can make the crucial difference.The Dartmouth women's crew team faced fast opponents Sunday at the Eastern Sprints Championships in Camden, N.J. Although no boat made it to the grand finals, the first and second novice boats came in third in the second-level finals and ninth overall.
"Let me read your unspoken words," repeats Asgerd (Katia Asche '04), with increasing frequency as Kristjan Thorgeirsson's adaptation of "Egil's Saga, Depictions of a Viking Poet," makes its way through eight episodic sections. Indeed, the play's impact resides in what remains unsaid -- like a Hemingway novel, the emotional intensity is delivered between the lines. Through concentrated choreography, chilling string accompaniment and a set of deceptively simple appearance, Thorgeirsson's senior fellowship project is as mysterious and powerful as the sea that haunts its central character.
Class Combat, the event billed by organizer Dan Chang '03 as Dartmouth's "newest, biggest tradition," will return to the Green tomorrow after last year's inaugural competition proved a well-attended success.
As the next Green Key party awaits, give your DBA a reprieve and sample one of the many fine restaurants in Hanover and its environs.
More than any other Dartmouth holiday, Green Key weekend has seen its traditions ebb and flow by way of intermittent administrative intervention and escalating student involvement in planning alternative social options.
When alumni reminisce about Green Key weekend in the 1950s, '60s and '70s, many remember what was their favorite time of the year -- a weekend of nice weather, girls on campus and, of course, plenty of alcohol.