Let's Play Pretend
Let's evaluate the following statement: War is evil and should be avoided, but in extreme cases it is necessary. The situation in Iraq is too fraught with emotion to serve as a sufficient analytical example.
Let's evaluate the following statement: War is evil and should be avoided, but in extreme cases it is necessary. The situation in Iraq is too fraught with emotion to serve as a sufficient analytical example.
As Americans prepare for war with duct tape and sheets of plastic, Dartmouth's study-abroad coordinators are attempting to determine what it means to be afraid while still proceeding with daily routines. Dartmouth is currently planning on running all Spring term programs and is not terminating any winter programs early, "but it is important to note that this decision could change in the next few minutes, days, weeks or months -- we just have no way of knowing," said John Tansey, executive director of Off-Campus Programs. On Feb.
"Example is not the best form of leadership. It is the only kind." These words were first spoken by Albert Einstein.
Down in the Baker basement, there is a world where letters have lives. Collectively, the Book Arts Studios " the Letter Press Studio, where printing is done and the Open Bindery, where books are made " are preserving the historical life of bookmaking. "If you're going to understand the history of books, if you're going to really appreciate the beauty of fine books, you need to learn how to print books yourself," Phil Cronenwett, the Rauner Special Collections Librarian in charge of the Book Arts budget, said. The Letter Press Studio is an icy blue room with a border of woodcuts stained blue, black, red or green, with the residue of continued inking lining the studio underneath high windows facing up into the tracery of winter branches. There are miniature drawers of engravings and fonts with pigeon-holed compartments used for each specifc letter and mark of punctuation. The oiled machinery blackly shines, waiting for the turn of a wheel or the shift of a lever to move into the exactitude necessary for printing. The Book Arts Studios "give students a window into how printing used to be done," student user William Raynolds '04 said. It is also a way to produce a frameable excerpt of poetry or prose. "It's a very holistic approach to creative writing," Cronenwatt said. Printing "gives you this entrance to the poem when you take these words one by one," Hamlin said. The Letter Press and its sister studio, the Open Bindery, are the Book Arts facilities at Dartmouth College. The Letter Press Studio was founded by Dartmouth professor Ray Nash in 1935, but it was abandoned after his retirement in 1970. It was reinstated in 1989 with the help of concerned community members Edward Lathem '51, Mark Landsbery and Roderick "Rocky" Stinehour, 20 years later, in the studio's original room. Unfortunately, printing classes are no longer offered at Dartmouth because the craft of printing "doesn't fall within one department," Louise Hamlin, the advisor to the Letter Press Studio, said. William Raynolds '04 used the Letter Press Studio for a first-year summer research project on the Koran and moveable type.
Clever slogans, 'war of liberation' draw fire
Dartmouth urged the U.S. Supreme Court yesterday to reassert its 1978 decision allowing race to be considered as one factor in admissions decisions.
Last Friday, I was walking back from the Dartmouth bookstore at two in the afternoon when I ran into a "mini-demonstration" of protesters.
He's the perfect man: tall, statuesque and made of gold. He doesn't talk back to you, and he can guarantee you a life of glamour, fame and, well, pretty much anything your heart desires.
The current anti-war demonstrations in several European capitals notwithstanding, America is on a path to war in Iraq.
Just how real is 50 Cent? Hyped by the likes of Eminem and Dr. Dre as the realest rapper to rise to the fore of the authenticity-starved rap scene, 50 Cent might seem poised to fall short of such daunting expectations. But 50 Cent has done everything but shortchange his supporters on his new album, "Get Rich or Die Trying." With his realness brandished and cocked, the Queens native unleashes 27 years of drug hustling and gunslinging over a heavy layer of thick, eerie beats engineered to put the fear of God, and inevitably 50 himself, into the listener. His realness speaks for itself; 50 needs none of the gristle and growl of rappers who have staked their flows, both cash and lyrical, on ferocity.
For all the talk of weapons of mass destruction, political regimes, oil and military technology, the success of the U.S.'s proposed regime change in Iraq will depend upon ideology the most.
On the heels of one of its most successful tournament appearances ever, Dartmouth's Mock Trial extended its winning streak as one team captured first place at the Jamaica Regional Tournament held at New York's St.
Add one more academic laurel to those on the heads of Heidi Williams '03 and Kate Szilagyi '03, and these two senior women may have trouble seeing the road ahead of them. Even a blind man, however, can make out that their futures are bright. Last week, national newspaper USA Today named the two freshman year roommates to its annual All-USA College Academic teams.
Student calls NYPD 'way out of line'
There will be war in Iraq. Barring a stunning, last-minute reversal -- a complete coup in Baghdad that ousts not just Saddam Hussein but his entire loathsome regime -- the United States and a coalition of allies will disarm Iraq by force.
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity's annual Alpha Week kicked off last evening in Collis Commonground with an examination on the current state of hip hop. The event, entitled "Warning Explicit Content: The Hypocrisy in Hip Hop" was primarily a discussion based forum that allowed audience members to voice their opinions on a variety of issues including the commercialism of hip-hop and the content of rap music. Alpha Phi Alpha member Heiyab Tessena '04, who served as the event's moderator, began the evening with a multimedia presentation on the foundations of hip-hop.
Dan Knecht's article "Bete Noire France" (The Dartmouth, Feb. 13) includes erroneous information regarding France's position on the Iraqi issue.
Sex: it's constantly thought about, often performed, but rarely discussed candidly. To break this silence, the Center for Women and Gender held its first ever Sex Festival last night in Collis Commonground. Those who fear Dartmouth has thrown aside the cloak of its conservative Ivy League history in favor of a lifestyle that would make Bacchus himself blush needn't quake in their smoking jackets, however.
Since opening the Ivy League season on Jan. 4 in Cambridge, the Big Green men's basketball team has sent a youthful lineup, containing only four upperclassmen, onto courts from Providence to Philadelphia.
The friendly confines of Thompson Arena will be a welcome sight to the men's hockey squad this weekend when they take the ice this weekend.