Assembly spending by comparison
Past administrations use $30,000 budget for cards, weights, faces
Past administrations use $30,000 budget for cards, weights, faces
Residential Security committee looks at locks
The Student Assembly voted last night to begin the process of compiling a course and professor evaluation guide and announced the completion of an advising guide for students selecting majors and minors. The Assembly voted overwhelmingly to establish a task force to work on the course guide, which has been published intermittently by the Assembly in years past. This year, resolution sponsor Jorge Miranda '01 said he hopes non-Assembly members will participate in the task force to ease the burden of creating the guide, which will be posted on the internet. "I think the students really want this.
Programming Board members visit Norwich, pin down wrestling date
Everyone knows Dartmouth students will attend events with free food, but what about free money? One lucky Dartmouth student may win a $20,000 prize in a half-court shot contest at the end of this basketball season, and a spectator at each men's hockey game will have a chance to shoot for $10,000. In addition to monetary prizes, Assistant Director of Athletics for Marketing and Promotions Brandon Macneill has added a host of new promotions to this year's sports events. For men's and women's basketball games this season, the Leede Arena balcony will be converted into a students-only "luxury box." Campus organizations and student groups can send a BlitzMail message to Macneill to request the box for any home game.
Today's elections end a highly volatile political season, but despite economic uncertainty and a looming presidential impeachment inquiry, most political pundits at the College said they do not expect any surprises in the vote tallies. All 435 House of Representatives seats are up for election as are 34 Senate seats, but all of the people interviewed by The Dartmouth said they do not expect a major shift in Congressional composition. "My gut sense is the current reading of very minor Republican gains makes sense," Government Professor Richard Winters said. Robert Pape, assistant government professor, said the polls are so close much will depend on the weather, which affects voter turnout. "If it turns out to be an awfully bad day you're likely to see Republicans do well in both New Hampshire and Vermont and if it turns out the weather is really terrific ... I think Democrats will do well," Pape said.
Possible separate facilities for female faculty
No ambulance required on club sidelines
Amarna and Panarchy fill houses with members and boarders
New financial aid packages offer more scholarships, fewer loans
Former NFL kicker tells students to act
Archimedes Plutonium alleges harassment and unfair pay raise
Nick Lowery '78, who spoke about community service last night at the Hopkins Center, starred in baseball and football while at the College but did not participate in community service back then. In an interview with The Dartmouth, Lowery spoke of his other pursuits.
English Professor offers unique life perspective to her students
Despite popular belief, concentration camps were not "shrouded in secrecy" in Nazi Germany, Robert Gellately said yesterday in a speech to a standing-room only audience in 105 Thornton. Instead, the German press presented the camps in a light that fulfilled Germans' desire for so-called "law and order," the professor of Holocaust history at Clark University in Worchester, Mass., said. "A great deal of information was published in Nazi Germany about the camps, as well as other sources of terror, such as the Gestapo," he said. "The real object of these accounts, of course, was to sell terror." Gellately said there was "a kind of divided consciousness" about the concentration camps in Germany. Jews and others who were hated by the Nazis knew a trip to the camps was a death sentence, especially during World War II. Nazi-accepted Germans chose to believe the propaganda because it eased their fear of being persecuted, directed the terror at people who were "others" and justified the existence of the camp as a positive element of society. "It's hard for me to say whether these people willingly blinded themselves, did not want to see or simply overlooked," Gellately said. He said the press presented the first concentration camps as holding places for Communist political prisoners who would only return to their "subversive activities" if they were released. Germans saw the camps as therapeutic and educational work opportunities for the prisoners, who would eventually return to society as useful citizens. "This is a boot camp mentality -- and of course, the temptation is: Isn't this the right thing, to get people off the streets and working?" he said. He said Germans also thought the camps improved their cities' economic health. Photos of the prisoners referred to them with euphemisms such as "protective custody inmates" and depicted them working in the countryside, gardening and even playing chess. "These pictures invited people to overlook the fact that all of these people were incarcerated without trial," Gellately said. After 1936, the description of prisoners expanded from Communists to types such as heavy drinkers, habitual criminals and people who did not hold jobs for long. The descriptions of the prisoners as "subhuman" and "antisocial" were vague enough that they would describe almost anybody, he said. Gellately said the people were also described to fit certain physical characteristics, allowing for a "racist interpretation" of the camps. The press mentioned the concentration camps less after World War II began. However, Germans believed the camps were places for hardened criminals that were harsher than any prisons in the country. Even if they heard some accounts of death, they thought it happened to other people who were subhuman, uncivilized and probably brought it upon themselves, Gellately told The Dartmouth following the speech. He said the Germans were also removed from the horrors and therefore were not very concerned about any rumors. The propaganda "gave citizens opportunities to persuade themselves that they lived in the best of all possible worlds," Gellately said.
Muslim feminist examines source of texts
Student life chair sees lack of opposing viewports on Assembly
Programming Board considers wrestling for last day of classes