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(04/10/03 9:00am)
As coalition forces and the remnants of the Iraqi military fought in the streets of Baghdad yesterday, at least two Dartmouth students were wishing they were there. Dan Brown '03 and Declan Lynch '03 -- both of whom will be commissioned in the U.S. Marine Corps upon graduation this year -- expressed some regret that they in all likelihood won't be involved in the war in Iraq.
(04/08/03 9:00am)
While Dartmouth students were struggling to wake in time for their 10As, Tim McNamara '78 was defending U.S. Navy ships from terrorist attack.
(04/04/03 10:00am)
New York Times reporter Lynette Clemetson has been as close to U.S. Navy bombers in Iraq as you can get without signing an eight-year flight contract.
(04/03/03 10:00am)
Although the fighting in Iraq may soon be over, the battle for Iraq's future is just beginning, seven professors said at a Middle East forum panel yesterday.
(04/02/03 10:00am)
Though extensive press coverage has insured that the current conflict in Iraq will be the best-documented war in history, some have decried the mainstream media as inherently biased. Such assertions have taken on greater significance in recent days, as two prominent reporters were dismissed for purported violations of journalistic procedure.
(03/31/03 10:00am)
Despite media predictions of a four to six day lull in the fighting, there has been no pause in hostilities in Iraq. Bombs continued to fall on Baghdad last night and Coalition forces have reportedly captured a number of high-ranking Iraqi military officers in recent days. At least 67 American and British troops have died so far, according to military officials.
(03/31/03 10:00am)
Thanks to the efforts of Dartmouth students, single mother Marlene DeNutte has a new home to call her own.
(03/25/03 11:00am)
As coalition forces close in on Baghdad and media reports flow continuously, the war in Iraq has captured the attention of the world. The next few days will be a pivotal time, according to three Dartmouth professors, but it will likely take far longer to unravel some of the puzzles of the current conflict.
(03/04/03 11:00am)
Students' enthusiasm for hot food and issues of College life saturated Student Assembly's Visions dinner last night in Collis Commonground.
(03/03/03 11:00am)
Running unopposed, Joe Hanlon '05 and Merrick Johnston '05 were named co-presidents of the Dartmouth Outing Club at the organization's annual election meeting last night.
(02/28/03 11:00am)
The United States cannot achieve racial justice without recognizing the frequent intersection between race and poverty, Georgetown professor Peter Edelman said at a lecture yesterday.
(02/26/03 11:00am)
The Upper Valley may be far removed from America's cities and suburbs, but its inhabitants face the same problems of substance abuse that have traditionally been associated only with urban centers.
(02/21/03 11:00am)
An intelligent actor may have influenced the history of Earth's organisms, Paul Nelson said at a Wednesday night lecture. Nelson -- a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute who holds a doctorate in philosophy -- examined difficulties in leading evolutionary theories on the origin of life and advocated further research on intelligent design.
(02/14/03 11:00am)
Regimes in the Middle East have been able to resist democratization not just because they are strong but also because their institutional structures allow them to split opposition movements, Ellen Lust-Okar said in a lecture last night.
(02/10/03 11:00am)
A student-run environmental petition drew 500 signatories to an empty beer keg in the Collis Center Friday, in an effort to convince administrators to ease keg restrictions at campus parties.
(02/10/03 11:00am)
Matthew Watt '04 died early last Thursday evening near his home in Riverton, Wyo.
(02/07/03 11:00am)
The Dartmouth community may gather this weekend to venerate one ring to rule them all, but they won't be celebrating around one rink as they have in the past. For the third year in a row, Psi Upsilon fraternity will not hold its Winter Carnival keg jump.
(02/03/03 11:00am)
A female Dartmouth Medical School student was assaulted outside her home in Wilder, Vt. by an unknown assailant last Thursday evening.
(01/31/03 11:00am)
In a move that has caused some outcry on campus, the Spanish and Portuguese and sociology departments two weeks ago contributed department funds to send a group of students to an anti-war protest.
(01/27/03 11:00am)
If temperatures in Hanover have been slightly warmer in the past few days, it may be on account of the fiery enthusiasm of Panhellenic Council president-elect Soojung Rhee '04 for her new job. Beginning in February, Rhee will assume leadership of the council, which is the self-governing body of the College's sorority system.