Watching the Ivies
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Spring term of this past year was marked by a horrific realization for campus: King Arthur Flour café in Baker-Berry Library would no longer carry their much-coveted sandwich selection. Unknowing first-year students merely hear longing whispers of “brie and apple” floating through the hallways, but will never experienced these glorious delicacies.
While many students at Dartmouth often enjoy a much-needed cup of coffee in the morning, two members of the Class of 2014 have taken their love of the drink to the next level by starting the Dartmouth Coffee Club.
A herd of zebra storm across the landscape, a bird jumps out of the water into flight in slow motion, thousands of monarch butterflies lift off into the air. If you have watched a National Geographic production, these scenes are likely to sound familiar. David Hamlin ’82 is an Emmy award-winning filmmaker and producer of these National Geographic films.
Last weekend, I returned to Hanover to cheer on the Big Green against Yale and smugly watch the '17s prove their worth as I fondly recalled when my own face was scorched by the flames of the bonfire two years ago. Well, actually, I arrived close to 11 p.m. on Friday (never take the 4:30 p.m. New York coach), in time to watch a few alums wander nostalgically around the dying embers, and, although I pride myself on being one of my few friends to actually enjoy football, I attended the game for a mere twenty minutes.
BROWN: Brown University has introduced an initiative called “I’m With the Band” granting Brown students free admission to certain performing arts events in downtown Providence, according to the Brown Daily Herald. The initiative, which went into effect Oct. 1., has allowed students to attend film screenings, dance performances, and other local performing arts events free of charge. The program represents an effort by Brown to collaborate with and affirm its connection to the local art community.
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Junot Díaz will speak Today in celebration of Latin@ Heritage Month at Dartmouth. Díaz’s address also represents a culminating event of the Office of Pluralism and Leadership’s (OPAL) “A Week of Community” this week. The talk will take place this Friday, October 18 at 5 p.m. in Filene Auditorium.
Many Dartmouth students have the experience of completing fascinating research or travelling the world and having thrilling adventures. Tanya Budler ’15 belongs to the latter group and is currently studying at the American University in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.
I love to wear jewelry. An outfit feels incomplete without a few snazzy pieces. The pieces you wear show off your personal style, but we all need a jewelry box revamp every once in a while. Here are a few finds under fifty bucks that will have you turning heads.
I've always wondered how other college kids spend their Friday nights, especially since my visiting friends are so intrigued by Dartmouth's social scene. As the bad and lazy friend that I am, I have yet to visit any of these friends at their own schools, and I was the ripe old age of eight when I visited my sister at college, so this term has been my first real encounter with a non-Dartmouth college social scene. For all you similarly curious souls, I will recount a few of my evening adventures and let you decide how they stack up against Dartmouth's widely diverse nightlife options.
Protip: never ask to see the menu at a Spanish restaurant. But why, you might ask. Well, a menú is in fact a 3-course set lunch meal. So if you ask for it at dinner, you will just get a funny look. And if you ask for it at lunch, a large amount of food will magically take over your table unannounced.
I haven’t been into the color pink since kindergarten when my mom got me a hot pink sweater with a matching skirt for my class picture. But this fall, think pink.
When you think of the term “space archaeology,” extraterrestrial life forms and the environments of other planets may come to mind. However, space archaeology is actually a much more grounded field focused on satellite imaging to create a realistic picture of how humans lived in ancient times, how the environment changed and how it continued to change.
As a precursor, this post is probably irrelevant to Dartmouth students who are interning 80 hours a week and getting paid far more than I could ever dream of andis directed instead to those of us with schedules that resemble the unglamorous nine-to-five workday.
You don't always choose the concerts at which you end up. Per the urging of a friend (and coincidently fellow Dartbeat writer), her and I attended Grouplove last Wednesday night at Bowery Ballroom in New York.
Seuss scholars criticized Senator Ted Cruz’s reading of “Green Eggs and Ham” as part of an analogy denouncing Obamacare in his all-night speech last Tuesday, according to an NBC News article last week. “Seussologists” criticized Cruz’s inclusion of Theodor Geisel ‘25’s children’s book in his diatribe, raising the point that the short story features themes of open-mindedness and compromise.