Stalked by the Green Card
I received my weekly "Dear Rolf (Yes, my first name is Rolf. My mother was heavily sedated when she named me.
I received my weekly "Dear Rolf (Yes, my first name is Rolf. My mother was heavily sedated when she named me.
To the Editor, On behalf of my good friends Geraldo Cadava '00 and Ross Fenderson '00, I would like to take this opportunity to set a few things straight.
To the Editor: Students and the Upper Valley community benefit greatly from the presence at Dartmouth College of distinguished guests.
Dartmouth faces Northeastern tomorrow in quarter final round
With the announcement of its All-Conference Teams yesterday, the Ivy League honored several Big Green athletes for their excellence on the fields of play. Dartmouth's Sea Lonergan '97 and Bess Tortolani '98 were both awarded First Team All-Ivy Basketball honors, as decided by the league's eight head coaches. In women's hockey, the Big Green's Sarah Hood '98 and Amy Coelho '97 were also graced with First Team All-Ivy honors. With his third consecutive appearance on the Ivy League's First Team, Lonergan became the 20th player in league history to take top honors in three seasons.
After two full terms of use, the Dash plan has seen a clear split in student opinion -- with freshmen generally satisfied and upperclassmen mainly confused about the new system. The state of students' discretionary accounts as of Feb.
East Wheelock Cluster Faculty Associates Marianne Hirsch and Leo Spitzer announced yesterday they intend to step down from their positions after this academic year to devote more time to teaching and research. History Professor Spitzer and Hirsch, a professor in the French and Italian department, currently reside in the faculty associate house adjacent to the Supercluster with their eighth-grade son. Dean of the College Lee Pelton said when the faculty associate position was developed last year, he had originally discussed a two- to three-year commitment with Hirsch and Spitzer. "But we agreed that if their personal circumstances were such that they could only stay in that position for one year, that would be fine with me," Pelton said.
I could use numbers and facts to convince you there is a worldwide, national and local homelessness problem, but you already know that there are far too many people who have far too little.
It is well established that students are unhappy with the remote location of A-Lot, the absence of student parking near the Green and the restrictive rules governing the use of cars by freshmen.
The Student Assembly constructed a pyramid of tennis ball containers filled with rolls of pennies and petitions on the steps of the administration building Parkhurst Hall yesterday morning -- the culmination of the Assembly's Will to be Well campaign which seeks the improvement of student life at the College. The more than $700 in pennies represented the money raised during the campaign through donations solicited in Thayer Dining Hall and at the Kresge weight room.
Metal-spikeed, black leather boots loomed in the corner. An interesting first impression of my twenty-year-old freshman roommate.
It's tipsy at the top. If some people say drinking alcoholic beverages is unhealthy, anti-intellectual or just plain stupid, Ivy League students do not seem to be listening.
Hailing from the high, windy plains of Tuva, a tiny former Soviet satellite bounded by Outer Mongolia and Siberia, the Tuvan Throat-Singers, "Huun-Huur-tu" present their unique brand of music to audiences in two shows playing in the Moore Theater today at 8 and 10 p.m. The Tuvan musicians, torch-bearers of a musical legacy that is centuries old, are renowed for their performances of an ancient musical art known as self-harmonizing. "Khoomei," or "throat-singing," is characterized by a vocalist singing two and sometimes three distinct notes simultaneously. Mostly nomadic cowboys by trade, Tuvan men use this artform as a means to calm and herd animals and attract wild ones during the hunt.
To the Editor: The letter written by David Mulliken on March 5 concerning the Will To Be Well was factually misinformed.
To the Editor: The editorial in Tuesday's issue, "Garmire: Release the Numbers", is the most poorly written editorial I have ever read in the pages of The Dartmouth.
Several hundred male College students last week received an unsolicited, unsigned letter from a homosexual man who says he compiled a mailing list with information obtained "through the College" -- raising questions about the confidentiality of student information. Male students and some female students with gender-neutral names received the letter, in which the man described himself as one whose "experiences trying to find someone have been disappointing." Soliciting correspondence from college students, the letter described the man's interests and noted a post office box in Cambridge, Mass.
In the wooded area by Bartlett Tower and the Bema that is seldom visited by students, there now stands a lone figure -- a statue of Robert Frost, the beloved poet who enrolled with the Class of 1896. Erected this winter, the statue was a gift from the Class of 1961. College Architect George Hathorn said the spot is an appropriate setting for the statue because "it's out in a natural landscape," typical of what Frost celebrated in his Pulitzer Prize-winning poems. Hathorn said he hopes the Frost statue will encourage more pedestrian traffic in the area east of the Shattuck Observatory. The new statue is one of very few at the College, but Hood Museum of Art Director Timothy Rub did not think the new Frost statue signaled a trend in increasing public sculpture at Dartmouth. "Some institutions have a long tradition of public sculpture, and others do not," Rub said. At Dartmouth, "the arts as part of the fabric of campus life are a relatively recent arrival," Rub said. He noted that the Hood Museum and Hopkins Center for the Performing Arts both were relatively recent additions to Dartmouth, an institution that previously did not have as strong a focus on the arts. At schools like Harvard University and Yale University -- where the arts have been more prominent -- alumni often donate statues, but this practice is less common at Dartmouth, according to Rub. The Hood Museum's priority is more on developing its permanent collection than on putting up sculptures, he said. Erecting a public sculpture is a lengthy, expensive and often divisive issue. Dartmouth's Design Review Committee, whose members include the College president, College architect, provost, and director of the Hood Museum, is responsible for "the campus look," according to Associate Provost Margaret Dyer-Chamberlain. The committee reviews the design of new projects on campus, Dyer-Chamberlain said. According to Rub, the committee is "working towards" a general policy on public sculpture, but has been unable to do so due to a lack of consensus on what these sculptures should look like, whether figurative, abstract or traditional. Furthermore, some people question whether the College campus needs more sculptures at all, considering its classic and simple look. Libby Morgan '00 said the only statue she notices is "the woman in front of the Hop." Morgan also said although Dartmouth "looks good," she would not mind seeing more statues. Michelle Ott '99 said the College should consider modern sculpture with caution since the campus has a conservative look, and "things that are more classical tend to be safer at Dartmouth." Public sculpture was more of a priority at the College in the 1970s.
The Big Green men's track and field team ended a strong season with fifth place at the IC4A Championship while the women's team took 18th place at the ECAC Championship. For the men's team, fifth place in the IC4A represents a tremendous improvement over last year's 19th place finish.
Women's hoops fall in final game against Ivy Champion Harvard