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(10/25/07 5:21am)
Volunteers involved with the project surveyed the area and color-coded houses according to their state of repair, according to The New Orleans Times-Picayune. The color red was assigned to homes that had yet to be gutted, yellow to those in the process of being rebuilt, blue to those inhabited or nearly rebuilt and green for empty lots.
(10/25/07 5:20am)
A semi-annual review of the College's Social Events Management Procedures, which sets guidelines for alcohol use by organizations, is expected to commence next week. The effort, spearheaded by Dean of Residential Life Marty Redman, will include four students and four administrators.
(10/25/07 5:19am)
Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week, advertised by controversial posters depicting a terrorist holding a gun to a figure's head as the person cowers on the ground, has aroused emotional responses among students concerned about the connotations of the event's title.
(10/25/07 4:14am)
(10/25/07 4:08am)
(10/25/07 4:05am)
Known as Peru's
(10/25/07 4:05am)
Eva Ayllon, a native of Peru, will bring her band, her beats and her massive belts to Spaulding Auditorium this Saturday, Oct. 22, at 8 p.m.
(10/25/07 4:01am)
Hodes asks readers to remember that pong is not life, and vice-versa.
(10/25/07 4:01am)
The Dartmouth Staff
(10/25/07 4:01am)
Captain Jamie Wallace '08 shot a two-day 152 to finish tied for 15th place.
(10/25/07 4:01am)
While the rest of the College struggled through midterms and classes for the last two days, the men's golf team concluded its fall season in style -- finishing fifth of 42 teams in the New England Intercollegiate Golf Association Championships.
(10/25/07 4:00am)
If you're anything like me, you're sick of talking about the changes to Dartmouth's Board of Trustees. Sure, there was a week when I would pontificate to everyone who would listen, but that period soon ended. In the scheme of things, the governance changes should, as best as I can tell, have little impact on our lives as students (notwithstanding this miserable idea for a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives to take some control of our College's charter).
(10/25/07 3:59am)
From regular "chat sessions" about our social lives, to heady discussions on our universe's constant state of flux, to pseudo-debates on political issues, my friends and I have conversations that cover it all. I recently observed, however, that when we talk about Dartmouth (read: the ways in which we directly interact with the institutions of the College), our conversations frequently progress down a familiar path and come to a familiar conclusion. We always tend to end with a comment along these lines: It just doesn't make sense to create the type of complex administrative bureaucracy that Dartmouth utilizes, especially when so many of the administrators seem clueless about the process of enacting effective policies.
(10/24/07 5:57am)
The Recording Industry Association of America plans to file charges under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act against 30 students at the University of New Hampshire for illegally sharing music files, the UNH student paper reported Monday. The students received notice of the planned suit Oct. 18, along with 381 students from other colleges, as part of an expanded effort by the RIAA to curb illegal music sharing on college campuses. The students have until Nov. 7 to accept a $3,000 fine or be charged in federal court. DMCA complaints to UNH, which provides internet service to students, have increased by about 65 percent over last spring, according to university officials. At present, action has only been taken against those who provide music files for download, despite concerns that future infringement suits will target students on the receiving end of exchanges.
(10/24/07 5:57am)
In the past, if a campus organization wanted to hold a large event -- the annual Native-American Pow-Wow and PRIDE Week come to mind -- they might ask six different committees for co-sponsorship and funds. But thanks the recent creation of the Special Programs and Events Committee, an umbrella group for large-scale event funding, organizations seeking over $5,000 for their events can apply to directly to one committee.
(10/24/07 5:56am)
Ask John Replogle '88 about his defining memory at Dartmouth, and he'll recount the words of then-Dean of Freshman Margaret Bonz to the newly inducted freshman class.
(10/24/07 5:56am)
Syracuse University political science professor Jeffrey Stonecash argued Tuesday in a Rockefeller Center lecture that the influence of class in American elections requires a higher degree of academic scrutiny.
(10/24/07 5:56am)
Syracuse University political science professor Jeffrey Stonecash argued Tuesday that the influence of class in American elections requires a higher degree of academic scrutiny in a lecture sponsored by the Rockefeller Center. In the speech, Stonecash stressed the importance of being skeptical of current literature about the role of class and called for increased research in the field.
(10/24/07 5:56am)
University of California at Santa Barbara lecturer Jeff Sheng's photography exhibit of gay athletes is on display here at Alumni Gym.
(10/24/07 5:56am)
Students hurrying through the Collis Student Center a little slower than most may have noticed the recent addition of around 20 photographs of athletes on display. Titled "Fearless," the exhibition documents gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgendered athletes in colleges and high schools across the nation, including Dartmouth: sprinter Jamal Brown '08, lacrosse goalie Andrew Goldstein '05 and Acting Dean of the College Dan Nelson's son, Jack, a skiier and 2007 graduate of Williams College.