Frosty's Corner
Analogy: Student Activism is to Dartmouth as Global Warming is to the Environment.
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Analogy: Student Activism is to Dartmouth as Global Warming is to the Environment.
At Dartmouth, we work hard and we play even harder. We are the elite. The cream of the crop. And boy do we know it. We haven't come here to learn, fools; we came here to make the big bucks.
R.I.P.The Dartmouth Indian Mascot(and all talks about bringing it back)1769- 2010
Moral: Not everything on the Internet is true. Sometimes this can lead to you being arrested.
True or False: At Dartmouth, your friends look just like you.
Moral: Never trust a graduating senior's advice. Chances are it's biased, blatantly untrue, or just really bad advice to begin with.
Office hours can be intimidating. Especially to a young, inexperienced freshman still new to navigating the academic waters at Dartmouth. But take heart, you're not alone. The waters are just as murky even when you're an experienced junior, who is still just as utterly clueless about what it is she wants to do with her life.
Thanks to alumni endowment funds, Dartmouth has accrued an impressive collection of both old and new artists' books over the years, according to Special Collections librarian Jay Satterfield. The works that are considered artists' books defy neat categorization, but they can be defined simply as art that uses the physical book as a form of expression, in addition to text. In this manner, artists' books work to challenge our preconceptions regarding book form and function.
Thinking of trying to navigate the social waters of flitzing while inebriated? Think again, Mr. Frat-anova and Ms. NoSpaces.
So maybe you've had a bad day with Madame Troll of the econ department. Or maybe you just realized, like 98.5 percent of your fellow classmates, you really do suck at organic chemistry.
With summer a week shy of closing,The heat at an end you're opposing,Your fears we shall quellWith truths we shall tell,If you don't shy from gettin' to nosing.
With three-fourths of the campus away this term, the potential for hook-ups has been mighty slim. This is not to mention that the normal outlets we inventive Dartmouth students often use to channel our excess libido have also been closed off, because Greek organizations are unable to register parties that involve alcohol as the majority of campus is underage. Chi Gam dance parties, AD black light parties and even alternatively hip social scenes, like Panarchy's Gatsby, just haven't had quite the same make out potential to them as in other terms, what with Safety and Security constantly monitoring and alcohol being less available as a social lubricant. (You're our last and only hope, Heaven and Hell!)
Did you miss out on Dartmouth's coveted Organic Farm CSA shares? Are you jealous of the size of my kale? Well, don't fret your ethanol-based, genetically modified self any longer. Go ahead and say no to those strawberries on 'roids that can pump more iron than you. Instead, check out Hanover's Farmers' Market every Wednesday, rain or shine. Or, for those of you who are more adventurous, head over to Lebanon on Thursday afternoons or Norwich on Saturdays. Regardless, grab your reusable bag and get ready to learn about the wonderful world of produce because Hanover and the Upper Valley are certified fresh veggie bonanzas!
ASFB's founder, Bebe Schweppe, wanted an ensemble that showcased the native talent of Aspen, Colo., to give the people in the Aspen Valley a dance troupe they could call their own, she said. Schweppe recruited dancers Jean-Philippe Malaty, now executive director of ASFB, and Tom Mossbrucker, now the company's artistic director, to help her form the group in 1996. In 2000, the company expanded to a second home in Santa Fe, N.M.
In light of all the hype generated by the anticipated arrival of Three 6 Mafia at Alumni Hall this Friday, and the unscrupulous scalping that has resulted due to a shortage of tickets, you may be wondering: "Why wasn't my student activities fee able to guarantee me a seat?"
At least that's the statistic put forward by many pharmaceutical companies and some of America's largest advertising agencies, according to documentary filmmaker Liz Canner, the Dartmouth Center for Women and Gender's 2009 Visionary-in-Residence.
Have you ever noticed that sometimes it seems like you run into certain people twice as often as you should? Have you ever considered the idea that that person might, in fact, be people?
What ridiculously alternative, slightly grungy, yet effortlessly chill and surprisingly hip social scene am I digging, you ask? And how can you get in on the action? Well, don't meet me down by the Orozco Murals.
But are we, as in you and me, actually willing to listen? And more importantly, now with the College's Energy Campaign thrust upon us, are we ready to take action? Or are we content to sit back and hope that our empty Collis salad containers will recycle themselves in the same way our term papers will write themselves?
The Hood Museum's newest exhibit, "Wearing Wealth and Styling Identity: Tapis from Lampung, South Sumatra, Indonesia," showcases the handiwork of generations of women from Lampung, a province on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, with an array of embroidered silk cloths and tunics traditional to the region. Complemented by walls shaded in fiery hues of gold, red and yellow, the Hood has managed to evoke a slightly exotic air for the exhibit, as images of Lampung and its people grace the walls amid the tapis-filled rooms.