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(11/11/10 4:00am)
Faculty, alumni and students interviewed by The Dartmouth said they expect newly-elected Trustee Annette Gordon-Reed '81 to offer a distinctive perspective on College issues that will enhance the discussion among members of the Dartmouth Board of Trustees.
(11/11/10 4:00am)
Based on the comic book series of the same name, the show follows deputy sheriff Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) as he travels around post-apocalypse Georgia looking for his missing wife and child. Injured in a police shoot-out prior to the zombie outbreak, Grimes wakes up in a hospital bed to find his world completely gone to hell. Dead and devoured bodies litter the hallways. Ominous warnings written in blood line the walls. As Grimes leaves the hospital, still in his gown, the camera pans out to reveal hundreds upon hundreds of bodies lined up in rows, victims of the zombie holocaust. And this is only the first 15 minutes.
(11/11/10 4:00am)
In public art controversy, the art in question is almost always the occasion for voicing other grievances. For example, when attacking the colonial legacies of racial inequality seem impossible, the easier and at times more productive thing to do is to criticize a work of public art and demand some form of public representation that would symbolically rectify what otherwise seems politically or economically intractable. Dartmouth College is no stranger to public art controversy. From Orozco's frescos, executed in 1932-33, to Walter Beach Humphrey's "Hovey Murals," completed in 1939, to Wenda Gu's "hair installation" occupying the library's Main Street in 2007-08, the College has witnessed periodic calls for censorship, often accompanied by race-baiting vitriol. Bizarrely, Roger Lott's editorial in The D ("Points in Perspective, Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2010) represents the first assertion that there "should" or "ought" to be controversy where none currently exists.
(11/11/10 4:00am)
Work hard, play hard. We've all heard this maxim countless times, but is it the best way to live our lives? In this modern age of positive psychology and emphasis on following your passion the old Dartmouth mantra is becoming obsolete. At least, it needs some qualification.
(11/11/10 4:00am)
*This week's article is brought to you by Evolving Vox. Got a futon? Need another? Call Vox. Please.**##
(11/11/10 4:00am)
The Big Green's varsity boat finished with a time of 14.57.767, while Princeton won the event, finishing approximately 25 seconds ahead of Dartmouth. The University of Virginia came in second with a time of 15:01.312.
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Courtesy Of Cbsnews.Com
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Stephanie Han / The Dartmouth Senior Staff
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Editor's Note: This is the first installment in a three-part series investigating race at the College.
(11/10/10 4:00am)
Expanding upon a campus-wide response to the January earthquake in Haiti, Dartmouth students, faculty and administration have revamped relief efforts to address the recent outbreak of cholera in Port-Au-Prince and surrounding towns, according to Presidential Fellow Molly Bode '09, who serves as the Dartmouth Haiti Response Coordinator.
(11/10/10 4:00am)
After one student's refusal to donate to the Senior Class Gift sparked controversy last Spring, Dartmouth has faced criticism from several national media outlets in recent weeks for allegedly encouraging student volunteers to directly pressure individual students to donate. Fund officials maintain, however, that they never publicly distributed a list of students who did or did not donate to the Senior Class Gift, and Sylvia Racca, executive director of the Dartmouth College Fund, said in an e-mail to The Dartmouth that she "deeply" regrets that the name of the lone student who refused to donate became public.
(11/10/10 4:00am)
Student Assembly and the College's Alcohol and Other Drug Education Program are looking for students to design a poster that outlines the risks of mixing energy drinks and alcohol. In light of recent incidences in which college students throughout the country became dangerously intoxicated after drinking Four Loko alcoholic energy drinks, College administrators worry that students do not realize the hazards of consuming such drinks, according Cyrus Akrami '11 and Max Yoeli '12, the co-chairs of the Assembly's Committee on Alcohol Harm Reduction. The student who submits the winning poster will receive a monetary prize, they said.
(11/10/10 4:00am)
The War and Peace Steering Committee began deliberations about eliminating the minor in March 2008 after enrollment in the program declined, government professor Daryl Press said. Press also serves as the War and Peace program director, and he said the program will continue to offer other opportunities such as lecture series, career events and the War and Peace Fellows Program despite discontinuing the minor.