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The Dartmouth
June 7, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Arts

'Zooropa' marks U2 techno

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It was not too long ago that U2 flooded radio stations and heated the summer with its incredible smash "Achtung Baby" and outdoor concert phenomena "Zoo TV Tour." In an amazingly short time, the Irish band has created a new and different album, just in time for another summer. The new album, which keeps with the "zoo" theme in its title "Zooropa," is definitely not old-style U2.


Opinion

Benefits for Gay and Straight

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32 Robinson is a series of columns representing the opinions of the summer editorial staff. The columns do not necessarily represent the official views of The Dartmouth. The administration is currently considering a plan to extend health benefits to the homosexual partners of College employees, treating one employee's same-sex domestic partner as another employee's legally married spouse.


Opinion

Abortion and Federal Funding

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Since it is already very hot outside, I figured that I'd add to the heat with some conversation that's certain to anger a few of the "activists" on campus. Recently the House of Representatives voted to uphold the ban on federally funded abortions.


Arts

Zoning laws create obstacles for new businesses

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Running a business can often be a gamble, and those who place their bets on Hanover must first pass an obstacle course of town by-laws that keep some businesses out of Hanover and help others prosper. Hanover is split into 14 zoning districts, each with a specific list of how land in the district can be used.


News

Heat roils campus

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Keep those fans cranking and head for the river or the few air conditioned havens on campus, because temperatures will be in the 90s all weekend. The summer's first heat wave has descended on New Hampshire, sending students scurrying to find a way to cool off, whatever the cost. "We've had some record-breaking and near record-breaking heat," said Pat Wester of the National Weather Service in Concord. The mercury climbed to 97 degrees in the state capital on Wednesday, breaking a previous record of 96 degrees set in 1900, Wester said.



Sports

All-Star selection lunacy

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RIDGEFIELD, Conn. -- It's All-Star time again, and as one of baseball's oldest traditions is about to get underway, it is once again time for another yearly ritual that is just slightly younger than the mid-summer classic itself: griping about the All-Star selection process. Year after year it becomes clear that the mass of baseball fans that vote in the teams have absolutely no clue what they are doing, and they routinely display their lack of intelligence when filling out their ballots. Now, true, it's a fan's game, and for that reason I would never advocate switching it to a vote of the players or managers, but that doesn't mean the most serious of errors can't be highlighted and giggled at. Witness some of the more interesting choices: Cal Ripken, Jr., SS, Baltimore -- Please do not get me wrong, I think Cal Ripken is a great guy and will look terrific on a wall in Cooperstown some day.


News

East German author reads works

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German novelist, essayist and current Montgomery Fellow Christa Wolf gave a reading of her major works last night in Cook Auditorium. Wolf, born and raised in the former East Germany, has drawn on her life experiences to inspire her work.


Opinion

Locard's Principle

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I was reading the other day about Emile Locard and his peculiar theory of fifty years ago called Locard's Exchange Principle.


News

Summer term reveals flaws in alcohol policy

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The reduced number of students on campus this term has revealed flaws in the College's alcohol policy. The policy, which took effect at the end of Winter term, is based on a mathematical formula and hinges on the number of students on campus who are of legal drinking age. If the policy is followed to the letter, then even if every student of legal drinking age on campus were expected to attend a party in a Greek house, there could be no more than a total of three and a half kegs on campus regardless of how many Greek organizations register parties. So far no more than two or three parties have been registered on any given night and the number of kegs on campus has not exceeded three and a half on any night. But Assistant Dean of Residential Life Deb Reinders said there is no cap on the number of parties that can go on in one night and hypothetically it is possible for the number of kegs on campus to exceed three and a half, according to Reinders. "When the alcohol policy is reviewed, that is something that the committee should look at," Reinders said. During the regular school year, the formula for the number of kegs allowed at a Greek house party depends on the number of legal drinkers expected throughout the night multiplied by the number of hours the party is expected to last.


News

Summer isn't just for sophomores

Amidst the scrambling to meet other '95s for picnics on the Green, bonding in debauchery in fraternity basements, climbing to the summit of Moosilauke and jumping off ropes into frigid waters in search of class unity, there are many students at Dartmouth this term who are not sophomores. Summer is for everybody, including '96s, '94s and '93s, exchange students and transfer students. Hanover's beauty is a magnet that attracts nature lovers who bike, hike, swim, jog, and revel in the sun.


Sports

Spring term sports wrap up

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RIDGEFIELD, Conn.--The 1993 spring sports season confirmed one very basic element of April and May sporting events at Dartmouth: they never fail to keep you guessing day to day. One of the most wet and cold springs in recent history kept teams inside Leverone Field House and Alumni Gym and off the fields and rivers of Hanover until several weeks into the term, wreaking absolute havoc on schedules and home games throughout the term. Even so, through the rain, the cold and the dark of mud, Dartmouth athletic teams managed to play their seasons, making them memorable for more than just the weather. The following is a brief, team-by-team look, for the final time, at the spring sports season. Baseball After starting the season with one of the best records in the Ivy League, the Big Green fell into an abyss that included nine losses in 11 games in one stretch to finish the season 14-19 overall, 8-12 Ivy. Although the team's numbers improved from last year -- it won five more games and batted 60 points higher than the 1992 season -- the true story of this year's campaign was a vastly improved attitude in the clubhouse and on the field. Joe Tosone '93, who captained the team with Clark Khayat '93, led the Big Green in 10 offensive categories and captured All-Ivy honors along with John Clifford '95. Women's Lacrosse Over one stretch of its season, the women's lacrosse scores looked more like the Detroit Tigers' (or even the Detroit Lions' if they had a defense) than intercollegiate lax. In a season where the team ranked as high as fourth in the nation and ended 11-4 overall, 2-4 Ivy, the most exciting part was a seven-game win streak where the team outscored its opponents 82-25, making it arguably the hottest team in the country. Men's Lacrosse The Ivy drought reached year seven for the men's lacrosse team, 3-9 overall and 0-for-everything in the Ivies, as the team once again failed to win an Ivy League game in a streak that has now extended to three Presidential administrations. The team had a number of close losses and a streak of bad luck. Men's Tennis It was a strong season for the men's tennis team, which shared a slice of the EITA for the first time in the league's 87-year history thanks to a tenacious, gutsy 4-3 come-from-behind clipping of Harvard in front of a packed crowd at the home match. Dartmouth was 15-7 overall and a nearly-unbeatable 8-1 in the Ivy League. Women's Tennis With a line-up that punished the tennis ball and its opponents, the women's team contended for the title right up until the last week of the season.


News

DHMC cancer program reaches out to rural areas

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Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center's Norris Cotton Cancer Center has announced a new collaboration with New Hampshire and Vermont physicians which is designed to extend the reach of experimental cancer treatments to patients in local rural areas. The program is the first to directly involve community physicians in highly sophisticated investigational treatments, according to Dr. L.



Arts

'Distant Cousin' emerge from Dartmouth family

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Somehow the cute, elementary drawing of rolling hills, apple trees and stick figures that decorates the cover of Distant Cousins' compact disc does not quite seem to fit with Elvis Presley doing karate. Then again, the group's first album, "Twice Removed," is not exactly what one would call consistent.


News

Pipes fills in as provost

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Bruce Pipes is now doing a job he might have gotten -- if he hadn't withdrawn his candidacy. But he still got the provost job, if only temporarily. Pipes will serve as the College's chief academic officer until the provost-designate, Lee Bollinger, the University of Michigan Law School dean, takes over next July. Pipes and Bollinger were both on the final list of four candidates in the search to succeed John Strohbehn.


News

Gay partners may get health benefits

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College President James Freedman is considering a plan to extend health benefits to the homosexual partners of College employees. A task force established by former Provost John Strohbehn completed a report last week outlining a plan to give employees' same-sex domestic partners the same benefits as legally married spouses. Although the report has not yet been released and a final decision will not be made until the College's benefits council and attorneys approve the plan, task force members say the College is committed to the principles involved. "The big decision has been made and we're going to move forward.


News

Thayer dean will return to teaching

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Dean of Thayer Engineering School Charles Hutchinson will step down next June after ten years of service to the College to return to what he loves doing most -- teaching. Hutchinson will take a year's sabbatical before returning to Thayer as a professor of computer and electrical engineering. A search committee, chaired by Engineering Professor Graham Wallis, will soon be appointed to find Hutchinson's successor. Hutchinson said there was no point in being in the education business if he did not like to teach.


News

Head of DarTalk steps down

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Jules Pellerin recently retired from his full-time position as manager of Telephone Services, but the College will not hire a replacement. Instead, George Newkirk, director of the College's purchasing department, which oversees Telephone Services, will assume Pellerin's duties while maintaining his own position. Pellerin, 62, began working for the College as a lab technician in 1960 and moved into the purchasing department in 1963.


Sports

Lightweights eliminated at the Henley Regatta

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The Dartmouth men's lightweight varsity and junior varsity boats were eliminated last week from the Royal Henley Regatta in England, only after both boats were able to advance to the second round of the prestigious race. The defeat of the Big Green team came after several wins against British crew teams. The varsity boat came from behind on Wednesday to beat the Molesley Boat Club, and the junior varsity boat also won over another British crew team. But the Big Green's final match at the Henley came on Thursday, when the varsity boat lost by a length to a London crew team.