SA sets sights on Kresge expansion
Student Assembly members kicked off their term last night by passing a recreation-concerned resolution and discussing goals for the upcoming year.
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Student Assembly members kicked off their term last night by passing a recreation-concerned resolution and discussing goals for the upcoming year.
Following up on the 261 lawsuits filed in early September against illegal music file-sharers, the Recording Industry Association of America announced Monday that it had reached settlements with 64 offenders.
Next year may take your average '04 to Wall Street or Cape Town, to a law firm, inner-city public school or clandestine service. Today and Thursday, that daunting array of choices will be on full display at the Career Services' Not-For-Profit and Employer Information fairs.
Does the gray Hanover weather have you down, and it's not even snowing yet? Do picturesque ocean sides, fields of beautiful poppies, and sunlight filtering over the ancient fountains and villas of Italy sound good to you? If so, I suggest you go watch "Under the Tuscan Sun" right away. It may not be a classic, but definitely a must-see film.
If Dartmouth had a celebrity A-list, SHEBA would probably top it. That's one reason an undercurrent of anticipation was palpable on Saturday morning, as the dance group commenced with this year's auditions. At 10:30 a.m., students clad in black dance pants and sneakers tentatively started trickling in and signing up for time slots, all the while glancing nervously at the more relaxed SHEBA members milling behind the sign-up table.
Dartmouth's impressive 9-2 victory over Harvard in the JP Morgan Chase ECAC Championship last spring must have convinced the uber-critical pollsters. Last Monday, ECAC commissioner Phil Buttafuoco made the announcement that the Big Green is the pre-season favorite to capture its second consecutive conference title.
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
A new reality show made its premiere Thursday. The most significant figure is this week's Newsweek coverboy and front-page news in all the national papers. A former Rhodes Scholar, he graduated at the head of his West Point class and sits on the board of several major corporations. Sorry, reality TV fans, this is not a better version of "Joe Millionaire" (with a guy who actually has some dough).
I am a Californian. Yeah, go ahead and laugh. If I had a dollar for every time I heard somebody say "so what's going on over there in your state?" I'd be rich enough to actually benefit from the Bush tax cuts. I'd be so rich, I wouldn't even have to open the envelope containing the fat check from the Bush tax cuts myself. I could have Pierre, my French butler do it.
As part of yearly improvements to campus, the Office of Residential Life carried out major renovations to the River Apartments and Kappa Delta Epsilon sorority this past summer, while also working toward increasing accessibility for handicapped students.
John Gardner, the youngest person ever to become a professor of Jurisprudence at the University of Oxford, gave a lecture yesterday that evaluated corrective justice as an answer to the question, "What is Tort Law For?"
The Chabad Lubavitch Organization -- a Hassidic Jewish group -- recently opened a new Jewish center in Hanover as part of its founder's vision to "bring Judaism to as many Jews as possible."
While Democratic candidates for President were busy making a late push for donations before the third quarter fundraising period ends today, seven Dartmouth students involved with the campaigns gathered last night for to defend their bosses' platforms.
In a move that Provost Barry Scherr described as a total surprise, College librarian Richard Lucier will be stepping down from his post after three years. According to an email sent by Lucier to the College's library staff and select members of the administration, he will step down when his contract expires on Jan. 30.
Considering that the most famous musician to ever come out of Quebec is Celine Dion, one might get the impression it is a region devoid of any artistic merit. However, these detractors were proven wrong Saturday night as La Botine Souriante (French for The Smiling Boot) played in Spaulding Auditorium. The group, which hails from Quebec, features nine male musicians and one female step dancer from Washington state.
To be the drummer of one of America's most popular rock bands is a claim that few people can make. Rarer still is the claim to have been the drummer of one of America's most popular rock bands, and then lose that gig only to join what might be the most popular rock band in America. However, such is the story of Matt Cameron, whose driving beats have provided the engine first for Soundgarden and then for Pearl Jam.
I hope I'm not the only one going into these "I-don't-know-what-I-am-going-to-do-with-my-life" panic modes. Recently they've been coming more often. It's up to about once a day now.
Last spring in the pages of The Dartmouth, I had a war of words on the issue of Kashmiri independence with a few writers, including an alumnus who had lived in India for several years. I made the claim that India illegitimately occupied Kashmir in 1947 and continues to sabotage peace talks with Pakistan, its archenemy on the Kashmir issue. The debate, however, was not resolved, and the Kashmiri problem remains.