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The Dartmouth
June 23, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Arts

Women show art

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Women artists from the College yesterday transformed drab Alumni Hall into a festive celebration of music, song, food and artwork. At the Women's Resource Center Student Art Exhibit there were etchings, paintings, photographs, poetry and pottery, all produced by women.



Arts

Hood exhibit explores a history of the female figure

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The Hood Museum of Art's new exhibit, "Crinolines, Bustles, and Tight-Lacing: Creating the Artificial Silhouette," traces women's fashions from the nineteenth century to the early 1900s. The emphasis of the unusual exhibit is on the changing silhouettes created by the underwear and support structures of the time period. The exhibit, displayed in the Harrison gallery, consists of 12 mannequins in various poses depending on their clothing.



News

Speaker attacks efforts for gay rights

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In a controversial discussion last night addressing the role of gays in society, Dr. Ernest van den Haag attacked efforts to pass legislation protecting the civil rights of homosexuals. A divided audience gathered in 105 Dartmouth Hall to watch Van den Haag's speech, which was sponsored by the Hopkins Institute and the Dartmouth Speakers Union. Before the speech, students who support homosexual rights hung a huge pink triangle, the symbol of the gay rights movements, from the cupola atop Dartmouth Hall. Inside, the audience of about 75 people was split almost evenly in its reaction to van den Haag's speech.


News

Recyclers push to eliminate bottles

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Buildings and Grounds officials have demanded that the College's dining halls stop selling bottled Snapple beverages or help pay for the cost of recycling the glass. Dartmouth Dining Services sells more than 15,000 Snapple bottles each month. "My preference is that we drink out of aluminum cans," said William Hochstin, director of Dartmouth Recycles, the College's recycling program. Aluminum is easier to recycle than glass, he said. "There is a problem with Snapple bottles," Building and Grounds Director Dick Plummer said.




News

Phi Delt may lose money over alcohol incidents

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Phi Delta Alpha fraternity may lose close to $4,000 because some underage students were caught drinking at an outdoor concert sponsored by the fraternity on May 13. The Programming Board of the Student Activities Office has said it will revoke $2,900 the Co-ed Fraternity Sorority Council contributed and may take back another $1,000 because of alcohol consumption at The Meters concert outside of Phi Delt that Thursday. The money would have helped cover the $9,000 cost of bringing the band to the campus.


Sports

A day of practice for Big Green football

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The 1993 Big Green football team will begin its quest for Dartmouth's fourth consecutive Ivy League title tomorrow when it will hold its one and only day of spring practice. Current conference regulations permit one day of practice before August but will allow 12 days of practice beginning next year. The team will not practice in full gear, but with helmets only. "We're limited in what can get done without pads," head coach John Lyons said.


News

Kiewit recommends computers for shmen

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A letter to incoming students this summer will urge them buy a more expensive and powerful computer system than the one recommended to the Class of 1996 last year. According to a draft of the letter prepared by the Committee on Computing, the recommended computer system is a Macintosh LCIII with a 12 inch black and white monitor, which currently costs $1,330. The package will cost approximately $200 more than the Classic II package which the committee recommend a year ago but the exact price cannot be determined until Apple replies to the computer store. Chemistry Professor Joseph Belbruno, who chairs the committee, said the committee based its recommendation on whether the computer will benefit the students just as well senior year as it does freshman year. "We didn't feel the Classic II would serve someone well for the next four years," he said.


News

Clinton will address N.H. Tech School

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President Bill Clinton will speak at the New Hampshire Technical School's commencement ceremonies Saturday. The school, located approximately an hour and a half from Dartmouth in Stratham, has a student body of 532 and is one of seven state technical colleges. The office of Representative Dick Swett, D-N.H., said that Clinton was choosing between Dartmouth, the University of New Hampshire and the small technical college. Senior Class President Doug Chia '93, the only student on the Honorary Degrees Committee which is responsible for finding a Commencement speaker, said he had not heard of any such plans by Clinton. "The decision for the speaker was made long before the election ever happened," Chia said.


News

College prepares for service plan

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President Clinton outlined his revised plans to help students pay for their college education two weeks ago, but how the proposed bills will affect Dartmouth students still remains unclear. Clinton announced two new acts -- one dealing with national service, the other dealing with student loans. The Student Loan Reform Act would initiate a pilot program of direct lending to students.



Opinion

A weather conspiracy

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I am angry. I'm angry about the fact that I have this stupid column to write, angry that I've a paper due Friday, angry that most of my friends are out of school already, and angry that I could be playing Frisbee -- not disc -- instead of doing any work. Obviously, the source of my aggressions is the weather.


Arts

Solar car race comes to Hanover

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All around the streets of Hanover, students have looked down to knee level to find members of the Dartmouth Solar Racing Team encased in sleek-bodied vehicles. Although it may seem like joy-riding, the team is preparing for the upcoming fifth annual American Tour de Sol, a seven-day solar and electrical car race, which will pass through Hanover next week. The team plans to enter two cars: the electric Equivox and the solar-powered Sun Vox IV.