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The Dartmouth
April 4, 2026
The Dartmouth
News
News

McCain, Dole to visit College Saturday

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While the campus will be abuzz with Homecoming activities this weekend, Republican presidential hopefuls, John McCain and Elizabeth Dole are expected to be on hand to greet students this Saturday to gear up for the two Hanover town meetings on Oct.


News

President reflects on first year at College's helm

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The historian in James Wright must recognize the significance of his first year in office. In just 14 months, events such the Board of Trustees' decision to radically change the College's social and residential life have ensured that Wright's presidency will be a debated part of College history. Despite his turbulent first year -- some aspects of which he deeply regrets -- Wright has found his job as the 16th president of the College highly appealing. "I've found this job more stimulating and rewarding than I thought it would be," Wright said. Looking back Reflecting on his first year, Wright said his greatest regret was the manner in which the Five Principles announcement was handled by the press and interpreted by the community. Although he still firmly believes that the Dartmouth experience needs constructive restructuring, Wright said, "the common perception was that we had announced a conclusion, when we announced the beginning of a process." Wright said that if he had the opportunity to alter the past, he would have shared the Trustee announcement with the community first before the media leapt on the story.


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Memorial held for Jenica Rosekrans '00

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Students, teachers, and administrators gathered at Rollins Chapel last night to remember and celebrate the life of Jenica Ann Rosekrans '00, who died in June of bacterial meningitis at the age of 21. Rosekrans's sudden death last spring shocked the Dartmouth community and those who knew her shared personal stories of their time with her. Interim College Chaplain Rev.


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'Noche Dorada' closes Latino Fall Festival

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Noche Dorada closed out the Latino Fall Festival, a week-long celebration that brought issues of the Latino community to the forefront at Dartmouth, in Collis Commonground Saturday night. The event -- coordinated by La Alianza Latina, the Lambda Upsilon Lambda fraternity, Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano(a) de Aztln and Hijas de Esperanza -- commemorated Hispanic Heritage month, which was themed "Celebrating Latinidad." "The week was a great success," Drew Vera '01, co-coordinator of the second annual festival, said.




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King of Jordan attends campus wedding

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Royalty was in town this weekend as King Abdullah of Jordan was the best man at the wedding of George Faux '84 in Rollins Chapel on Saturday afternoon. Abdullah arrived Friday afternoon with an entourage of 50 service men, according to guests who attended the wedding. Faux first met Abdullah as a roommate at Deerfield Academy in Deerfield, Mass.


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Report shows higher incidents of sexual assault

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The Annual Report of the Sexual Abuse Awareness Program that arrived last week in Hinman boxes paints a more serious picture of sexual abuse at Dartmouth than the Safety and Security's Annual Security Report that came out earlier this fall. The SAAP report says there were 26 cases of sexual assault or rape between September 1998 and August 1999, as well as 19 cases of unwanted sexual conduct, three cases of attempted sexual assault or rape and three cases of relationship domestic abuse. Safety and Security stated in the fall Security Report that zero incidents of sexual offenses were reported to their department during the same one-year period. According to Susan Marine, coordinator of SAAP, the vast discrepancy between the two reports stems from the fact that victims of sexual assault often do not report their case to Safety and Security, but do alert Sexual Abuse Peer Advisers, deans, Dick's House or Marine herself. She said whenever students come to her to report cases of sexual abuse or assault, she suggests that they tell Safety and Security about the incident as well.


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Kiewit announces wireless Ethernet plans

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Dartmouth students will be able to access the World Wide Web, search the Online Library and check their BlitzMail accounts via a wireless Ethernet connection by the end of the calendar year, according to Computing Services. Access points will be installed in popular student areas around campus -- including the Collis Center, the 1902 Room, Silsby hall, the Top of the Hopkins Center and eventually the Green.


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Area hotels already booked for C & R

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Seniors who haven't made hotel reservations for their relatives on Commencement weekend might want to act fast, or they could find themselves with a couple of extra roommates for the occasion. Hotels in Lebanon, West Lebanon, Lyme and Hanover are already booked solid for the weekend of June 10. In fact, some hotels, motels and bed & breakfasts in the area -- such as the Chieftain motel in Hanover -- are already completely booked for the 2001, 2002 and 2003 graduations. "We establish relationships with our guests," general manager of the Chieftain motel Karen McLellan said.



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CFSC announces new alcohol ed. plan

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The Coed Fraternity and Sorority Council is currently revising their alcohol education program for new members of the system, meaning next year's pledge classes will receive a Dartmouth- specific program designed by the CFSC. Margaret Smith, coordinator of Alcohol and Other Drug Education programs and a consultant for the committee, said the study of new member education programs was initiated by the CFSC to address specific Dartmouth issues. The committee will also discuss ongoing alcohol education efforts of the CFSC. This year's pledge classes, like previous years' classes, will be trained by undergoing the Training Intervention Program, a nationally-designed program that emphasizes serving alcohol in bar-like settings, Kevan Higgins '00, CFSC treasurer said. Smith said the TIPS program is a good one, but that the CFSC has recognized the need to focus on a wider range of issues when informing new members. "We want a program that will be useful to everyone in the system," Smith said. In designing the program, the committee will be meeting with Safety and Security officers, Hanover Inn employees and DHMC staff, as well as Smith and Susan Marine, the coordinator of the Sexual Abuse Awareness Program. Higgins said the new alcohol education will focus on Dartmouth issues like ways to serve beer in fraternities safely and legally, as well as the campus resources available to students in the case of health problems and emergencies. Smith said the program will incorporate information about other drugs and the role alcohol can play in sexual assault. She said the goal was for "people to know how to have a really good time, and at the same time have resources and information on alcohol and other drugs." Marine said new training would also include information on recognizing and intervening in situations that could lead to potential sexual abuse. This year, Higgins said the CFSC is considering having Safety and Security Officer Bobby Young speak to both new and old members at every CFSC house. In addition, Marine said this year's education about sexual assault will include more general programs on encouraging healthier relationships and sexual communication. Higgins said the CFSC hopes Dean of the College James Larimore and members of the Board of Trustee's steering committee will come to speak with the group so they can discuss ways the CFSC has been improving over the past year, including the new education program planned for next year.



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Bike route from DHMC to Hanover proposed

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A bicycle route from Hanover to the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center may soon be under construction if the town's legislature accepts a committee's proposal early next week. The committee, charged in 1997 with developing a plan to promote an alternative to automobiles, will finalize the proposal today and present it to the town on Monday. The bike route will start at the corner of the Dartmouth Food Co-Op, and end at the DHMC, according to Dr. William Young, the Recreation Department representative to the committee.



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Hanover doubles parking meter rates

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Parking meter rates in downtown Hanover were doubled to 50 cents an hour on Monday following the outcome of a July vote by local business owners. The increase will affect meters in town parking lots as well as most of Lebanon Street, which had previously used 25 cents an hour.


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Controversial Princeton professor defends views

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Princeton University's Bioethics Professor Peter Singer, who garnered national media attention this summer for justifying euthanasia for severely disabled infants, stirred controversy from the moment he was hired last year. In his first public forum since arriving at the University this fall, Singer squared off last night against Adrienne Asch, a blind professor from Wellesley College. Singer's presence at Princeton has prompted campus-wide debate and discussion this year, according to Princeton senior Dan Powell, a bioethics major who helped organize last night's event sponsored by the Bioethics Forum of Princeton University. Powell said the views Asch expressed last night were in sharp contrast to Singer's.



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Wuthnow speaks on American spirituality

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Princeton University Sociology Professor Dr. Robert Wuthnow spoke on the evolution of religion in the 20th century and likened spirituality to hamburgers during yesterday's 23rd annual Orr Lecture held in 2 Rockefeller Center. The lecture, entitled "The Gods We Deserve?


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Ivy endowments on the rise in last decade

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If the start of the 1990s bore witness to several universities raising 10-digit sums of money for the first time, it seems as though there will be no trailing off at the decade's end. Last week, Harvard University President Neil L.