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(07/17/03 9:00am)
So here we are, in the fifth week of our sophomore summer and the question that begs to be asked is: does the reality hold up to the myth? We've all heard about the legend that is sophomore summer. You hear about this unique aspect of Dartmouth before you've even arrived here. Everyone talks about the summer with unbridled enthusiasm and nostalgia -- the hype is so overwhelming that you're almost tempted to feel sorry for all your friends in other colleges who don't get to spend a summer at their schools taking classes. Are we just brainwashed, or is sophomore summer really all that it's cracked up to be?
(07/17/03 9:00am)
What happens when you throw a party, but no one comes?
(07/17/03 9:00am)
Efforts on the part of Germany to remake public perception of German business corporations after the fall of the Third Reich were as much a matter of shrewd economic sense as they were of a sincere attempt to restore its integrity, Prof. Jonathan Wiesen said to a Dartmouth audience in a speech on Tuesday.
(07/17/03 9:00am)
Tubestock -- the popular party on the Connecticut River slated for the coming weekend -- is perhaps the most controversial of Dartmouth's festive traditions. It has never been sanctioned by the College nor planned by any central organizing body, and in the recent past, its cancellation has seemed imminent. Nonetheless, the major question about this year's fest seems to be not whether it will happen, according to students and administrators -- but how it can happen safely as possible.
(07/17/03 9:00am)
The Student Assembly allotted $1,000 at its Tuesday evening meeting for the production of clothing that promotes sexual awareness.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
As part of the Summer Arts Initiative, Hood Museum of Art director Derrick Cartwright led a trip to the Storm King Art Center, an outdoor sculpture museum in Mountainville, N.Y., last Saturday.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
Among hundreds of top professional and college athletes nominated for one of thirty-three annual ESPY awards is Dartmouth College class of 2001 graduate Kristin Luckenbill '01. Luckenbill, commonly referred to as "Lucky" on the pitch, joins Brazilian National Team star Katia, 2002 WUSA MVP and Offensive Player of the Year Marinette Pichon, and German National Team 2001 player of the year Birgit Prinz in the pack nominated for Best Female Soccer Player.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
Call it a "Lucky" break.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/15/03 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/15/03 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/15/03 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/15/03 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(07/15/03 9:00am)
Each of us in Dartmouth College Republicans, in our own favorite places on campus, picked up a copy of "The Dartmouth" this last Friday morning with joy and expectation. We couldn't wait to see the words the paper used to describe our "Dartmouth Loves America" barbeque, the cheerful quotes of all of those who joined with us, the pictures the paper used to visually evoke this scene of thankful celebration. We had all been at the event, and it had been a wonderful success. But for each of us, in our own favorite places, our hope turned into sadness as we progressed through the piece. By the time we were finished, each of us was deeply disappointed. The article published by Matt Lewis in the July 13 edition of "The Dartmouth" ("Dartmouth GOP Stages Collis Rally") covering our event was not only factually incorrect at points, but was written in a tone of negativity and cynicism surprising for a front page news piece. We want to use this opportunity to correct several errors, but also to address the larger implications that the publication of this article means to the entire Dartmouth community.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
From small details to over-arching, conceptual development plans, it is a program that has involved hundreds of people since its 2001 launch, according to director Jay Davis '90. Dartmouth students, especially members of the sophomore class. Professors and administrators. Volunteers from in and around the Upper Valley region. Businesses and corporations, too, have made Summer Enrichment at Dartmouth a reality.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
The New Hampshire Pediatric Society recently named Dr. Bill Boyle '59, Dartmouth Medical School's professor of pediatrics, Pediatrician of the Year.
(07/15/03 9:00am)
Students who share copyrighted music over the Internet and across College networks might face serious legal trouble if they continue to swap files.
(07/11/03 9:00am)
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. Today, Sweeney talks with Canadian hero Nathan Szymanski '05.
(07/11/03 9:00am)
While World War II rages on the European continent, Walter Redlich and his wife Jettel and daughter Regina are safe from the conflict, tucked away on an isolated farm in Kenya.
(07/11/03 9:00am)
In the last few weeks, I've read with mild amusement a series of editorials claiming that Dartmouth needs to "brand" its name so that it will have the same verbal resonance as Harvard, Princeton and Yale. I'm amused because almost every reason offered is either asinine, immature or incredibly pretentious.