200 students protest $800 DBA proposal
Crowd in Thayer hostile to proposed meal plan
Crowd in Thayer hostile to proposed meal plan
Big Green beat UMass Minutewomen, 13-8, at Chase Field
Fifty-four Dartmouth students, staff and faculty members took a vow of silence from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Jeton defeats Fairley and Haldeman to become Board's fourth woman
Almost 70 students were arrested for alcohol violations in 1995, nearly twice as many as the previous year and many times more than the rest of the Ivy League combined. Eleven students were charged with alcohol violations at Cornell in 1995.
The Big Green ousted the Tufts Jumbos, 16-11, yesterday in a slugfest in Medford, MA. The win was the fifth in a row for Dartmouth, which improved to 9-7 heading into this weekend's Ivy League play at Red Rolfe Field. It was a big day for senior Andrew Spencer as he became Dartmouth's all-time hits leader with a single in the top of the first inning.
Spring term artist in residence, Reeva Potoff, received her MS in Art from Yale University. Nonetheless, she cites popular culture as an important source of her inspiration -- inspiration she has been able to translate into art thanks to her formal education and knowledge of traditional schools of art. Potoff is an installation artist -- she incorporates her art into the surroundings in which it is displayed.
Junior attack Jen Greene has managed to provide the helping hand for the Green and White this year with 18 assists on the season so far. But that's probably something she's very used to by now.
I have been pleased by the recent accomplishments of Jon Heavey and his partners in the Student Assembly, all of whom have worked hard to regain much of the respect that the organization had lost during my first year at Dartmouth.
Does the Student Assembly matter? Does SA matter to you? Well, the answer that I hear all too often is a very quick, "No." The response to those questions that I would offer is that it can.
Though I was certainly tempted to cram my entire platform into this editorial, I have decided against cramming because, let's face it, platforms are boring. Instead, I want to expand on an idea which I call Project: 2000.
The Big Green used a 12-run scoring spree in the final three innings to beat UMass-Lowell, 16-13, yesterday in Medford, Mass. Rookie James Little swung the hot bat for the Big Green, going 2-for-4 with a double and a four-bagger as he knocked in four runs on the afternoon.
Geraldo Cadava '00 and Ross Fenderson '00 plead guilty and were fined $480 in Lebanon District Court yesterday for the theft of a guitar and three portable stereos from Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity during Winter term. Cadava and Fenderson were arrested in March for removing a Fender Stratocaster electric guitar and the stereo equipment from the Sig Ep basement Saturday Feb.
Tricked by four 20-year-olds
Queer housing was only contentious issue
Freshmen Kathy Kim and Ben Oren announced they will run for Student Assembly president and vice president on an informal ticket, citing a lack of firm positions on specific issues by the current candidates as their reason for joining only a week before the election. "We looked at the candidates and saw the platforms they presented, or the lack of platforms in some cases, and we decided we would be able to implement the ideas people want," Oren said. Kim said the race lacks diversity and specific issues because the candidates all agree on the issues. Oren said the specific issues they would like to address include greater priority for students for tickets to Hopkins Center events, reforming the Committee on Standards and fighting plans to relocate the Special Collections library to Webster Hall. "We don't have enough student space as it is," Oren said. The candidates announced their candidacy too late to appear in last night's presidential and vice-presidential debates, but their absence is not the only disadvantage they face.
Gripes against technology too often take the form of reference to a mythically happy past, with no acknowledgment of those real benefits which technology has brought to society.
Notorious B.I.G.'s latest release, "Life After Death," delves into new realms of rap expression and resurrects questions concerning the message of gangster rap and its effect on listeners. "Life After Death," ironically follows the theme of death which was set forth by his first album, "Ready to Die" -- a theme that was realized by B.I.G.'s recent murder. Notorious B.I.G., also known as Biggie Smalls (his birth name is Christopher Wallace) set a trend within his production company, Bad Boy Entertainment, owned by the very visual Sean "Puffy" Combs.
The Student Assembly passed a resolution last night to nominate up to 12 students for consideration by Dean of the College Lee Pelton in the selection of members of the Committee on Standards. The COS resolution does not give the Assembly the power to appoint students to the committee, which hears and adjudicates cases of students accused of violating the College's rules.
In tonight's performance of "Real People," College students will recognize many familiar faces dancing in a unique project which is making its first appearance at the College. Fifteen Dartmouth College employees from Dartmouth Dining Services and Facilities, Operations and Management will participate in the dance performance under the direction of professional choreographer Ann Carlson. For 10 years, Carlson has worked on many productions similar to this in which she "gathers people around their professions" in a series of performances entitled "Real People." In the past, Carlson has used lawyers, nuns and basketball players in her performances in an effort to de-construct the stereotypes which attach themselves to certain professions. The performance will reflect the personal lives of the performers by portraying the dreams and inspirations that our College's employees have experienced outside of their professional lives. The entire presentation focuses on how public events shape people's individual development. In preparation for this project, each employee did much self-introspection and conducted many exercises aimed at portraying themselves accurately in order to represent a piece of themselves to the audience. The performance also features Carlson herself, who will be performing a solo titled "Blanket," which she finished in 1991. The dance challenges the typical perception many members of the Dartmouth community have of these employees, allowing us to see them in a different light. As such, it works towards breaking stereotypes and allowing the true character of these performers to come out.