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(10/01/04 9:00am)
Not surprisingly, the Dartmouth sailing team is back on top of its game at the start of the fall season. With new rankings released just last week, the coed team is ranked third in the nation, while the women's team is fifth overall. Not bad for only two weekends of competition under their belts and neoprene suits.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
Providence, R.I. -- After last week's disappointing loss to Boston College, the Dartmouth rugby team went in search of their first league victory Saturday against Ivy rival Brown. In a strong showing, the team was led by captain Erik Richardson '05 and co-captain Brad Hogate '05, who each recorded hat tricks on the way to a convincing 64-9 victory.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
After a triumphant Ivy League opener and glorious win over Brown University last Sunday, the Dartmouth women's soccer team succumbed to the No. 26 Boston University Terriers in an evenly matched game at home Wednesday afternoon.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/01/04 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/01/04 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(10/01/04 9:00am)
A recently released three-year crime report compiled by the College's Department of Safety and Security details a dramatic increase in burglaries that occurred in College residence halls last year. The alarming rise in theft came as news to most students, however -- a result of minimal communication between Safety and Security and the student body. The College is required by federal law to release such a report every October, but it ought to go further and make weekly reports available to the Dartmouth community so that students might be aware of growing problems that could affect their personal well-being. Safety and Security needs to be held publicly accountable for whatever disciplinary actions officers take against students, and all this information should be available to those who seek it. In past years, Safety and Security has posted regular BlitzMail bulletins that served just this purpose, but for some reason these bulletins are no longer to be found. We believe that Safety and Security must take a more proactive role in communicating possible threats -- as well its own actions -- to students directly. A yearly report -- the bare minimum -- is not enough.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy, The Amazing Race, The Bachelor and Fear Factor: These are just a few of the television shows stations have debuted in an attempt to lure viewers to their channels. Soon, Dartmouth Television will offer a new docket of original programming also, it attempts to revamp its image and gain a broader audience.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
Essayist Andrew Sullivan appeared on campus Thursday night to offer Dartmouth students an articulate and informative critique of President Bush's platform and that of his challenger John Kerry.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
Dartmouth government courses don't teach how to start a fire and ingest insects, but Keith Boykin '87 found one reality show where a government degree proved useful.
(10/01/04 9:00am)
A Dartmouth College employee has tested positive for hantavirus, a non-contagious but potentially fatal respiratory disease carried by rodents, the College announced Thursday.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
They made something out of nothing. What exactly it was they made out of "Death and the Ploughman," was, at best, unclear. The piece, authored by Johannes von Saaz in 1401 and recently staged in a new translation by the SITI Company of New York, presents core questions surrounding death in a didactic dialogue. The performance oozed with spastic, Martha Graham-inspired movement based on medieval diptychs. Or so the director, Anne Bogart, claims. But nonetheless, they made something out of nothing.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
When Matt Brown '05 announced to last weekend's crowd at Friday Night Rock, Dartmouth's weekly free alternative rock show that might be the only redeeming factor of Fuel Rock Club in the Collis basement, that this coming weekend would be bringing the band Enon, some excited crowd-member shouted back, "The actual Enon!?"
(09/30/04 9:00am)
When it comes to Major League baseball parks, it's really just Baltimore's Camden Yards and then everywhere else. And I'm not just saying this because I was dinged at Lehman, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley for a winter internship and am now desperately begging the Orioles for a job. I'm also writing this because I'm hoping that an avid reader of The D will see this article and then tell daddy to hire me.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
My father always says, "I'm Catholic, my wife is Jewish and my kids are Yankees fans." Therefore, it's understandable that in my eyes Yankee Stadium is the holiest of places.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/30/04 9:00am)
To the Editor:
(09/30/04 9:00am)
Reading Tuesday's editorial pages, I was jarred out of my semi-conscious state of late-night procrastination. I wasn't expecting any thrills when I started perusing The Dartmouth when I noticed a considerably hawkish "Confronting a Nuclear Iran" by Dan Knecht (The Dartmouth, September 28). His opening line -- "within a few months, America will have lost the 'War on Terror'" -- sent shivers down my spine and I was soon wide awake in anticipation of something extraordinary. Alas, Mr. Knecht failed to deliver the goods. While I enjoyed reading his piece, I must respectfully disagree with him that a tactical airstrike against Iran's nuclear facilities or any other form of military attack at this time will provide a feasible solution to the problem.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
Your article on September 29, "Registration Policy Shift Worries Greeks," was a dismaying but somewhat unsurprising update on the administration's continued battle to rein in Dartmouth social life to create a duller campus. What has come to bother me is not so much this goal, which is typical of middle-aged bureaucrats, but the insidious way in which Greek and alcohol policy creation is referred to as dialogue. The Student Life Initiative in its full glory has more or less come to a halt, but the administration has learned two valuable lessons from the experience. The first is that unpopular, detrimental policy can be enacted far more successfully piecemeal than it can with one sweeping change. The second is that whenever discontent swells, the administration should call together a group of students to form a committee, drag out meetings endlessly, publish a report during finals or Summer term and then subsequently ignore students' most important recommendations, extracting minor recommendations to tout as student-administrative collaboration.
(09/30/04 9:00am)
A substantial increase in alcohol-related arrests at Dartmouth last year was due to New Hampshire's new internal possession law, according to College officials and Hanover Police Chief Nicholas Giaccone.