Cina '98 pursues music, predicts collapse of society
"I'm not exactly an anarchist," Brian Cina '98 said. "I just think there's a very good chance our society will crumble."
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"I'm not exactly an anarchist," Brian Cina '98 said. "I just think there's a very good chance our society will crumble."
Before they prepare to embark into a world without DASH and dorms, seniors remembered what makes the College what it is and bonded with their classmates during Senior Week.
East Wheelock residents already have their own dean, snack bar and the newest residence halls, but they will be getting something else unique next Fall -- their own judicial system.
Retired German Professor Werner Hoffmeister died last Thursday at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.
Dr. C. Everett Koop '37 called yesterday's defeat of an amendment that would hold tobacco companies liable for the health problems caused by smoking "a sellout to the most horrible crooks in the world."
After paying over $6 million in property taxes to the town of Lebanon, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center is fighting back. The medical center filed a petition and motion in Grafton County Superior Court last Thursday to contest the denial of its property tax exemption status.
Though the veritable deluge of alcohol that defined Green Key in the "old days" has evaporated to some degree, students still say that they engage in more drinking during the famed spring soiree.
In a landslide vote during last night's Town Meeting, the citizens of Hanover approved a new $5.1 bond issue for a Lebanon Street parking structure to be partially subsidized by the College.
Dartmouth alumnus E. William Crotty '53 has been appointed the new ambassador to Barbados, Barbuda, the Commonwealth of Dominica, Grenada, St. Lucia and St. Vincent -- all islands in the Eastern Caribbean.
The Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center paid over $6 million in taxes from its savings account to the city of Lebanon on Monday, but it plans to fight to get the money back.
Although the company formerly hired to build the new Ledyard bridge has declared bankruptcy, construction on the project is still scheduled to be completed this fall.
Although Affirmative Action has been reduced to compliance with government regulations, Horace Cooper said last night that he still believes in the spirit of the idea.
Former National Security Advisor Anthony Lake began a speech he gave yesterday afternoon with a bang. Or more precisely, with a description of the sound he heard when a Dartmouth student smashed headlong into a bass drum during a Harvard-Dartmouth football game.
More than 200 people from the College and black theater community attended Saturday's conference, "African-American Theatre: the Next Stage," at the Hopkins Center.
A panel discussion on historically black fraternities and sororities criticized comparisons of the black Greek system and modern day gangs before an audience of about 30 people last night in 105 Dartmouth.
Over 200 students had ringside seats to see Don King -- heralded as the "greatest promoter of all time" -- discuss racism and the history of America last night in 105 Dartmouth Hall.
Despite recent allegations of Safety and Security misconduct, the organization is more concerned with assisting students than judging them, said Safety Security's Public Relations Director Lauren Cummings '72.
Winter Carnival was unusually calm this year, according to the Hanover Police.
On May 12, Hanover residents will be asked to approve a $5.1 million project that would include a 300-space parking garage as well as 48,000 square feet of office and retail space.
For the town of Hanover, big weekends such as Winter Carnival are always good for local businesses, but business owners say the Carnival weekend will not reach the proportions that it did in the days of yore.