Friday, May 25, 2007

Craigslist hell

There is one word that inspires dread in the souls of all Dartmouth students. No I’m not talking about “commitment,” “Parkhurst” or “gonorrhea.” I’m talking about Craigslist: a process that is just as excruciatingly painful as all of the above, and much more time consuming. More »

Graduate from DDS

By Haley Morris and Anna Payne, The Dartmouth Staff

The term is finally winding down and for a good quarter of the campus’s population, each dwindling day brings the bittersweet possibility of last chances. While some may prefer to savor the final Fried Chicken Monday at Food Court, we at the Dish encourage perhaps tastier tributes to the Upper Valley at large. More »

Alex Got In Trouble: Our Better Selves

By Alex Howe, The Dartmouth Staff

I’d like everyone to meet Guillermo Olivos ‘05. You may know him as Will Olivos — he didn’t go by his real name until Biloxi. After all, he was a different person at Dartmouth. More »

One foot out the closed door

By Abi Medvin, The Dartmouth Staff

The intricacies of Dartmouth culture have become so convoluted in my mind that I’m not exactly sure if this observation is profound or blindingly obvious: sex, even the casual kind, is about connection. More »

Some Friendly Wisdom

I know my tens of readers will be disappointed (we just hit double-digits!), but this marks the end of my run here at The D. Even though this column never had a true point, I still felt there needed to be a resolution to this endeavor. More »

Overheard

‘08 Sig Delt: I’ve been blacked out half of my life … does that make me younger? ‘08 Kappa: Kappa gets too much Overheard facetime. Phi Delt should get more Overheard facetime. More »

The Cost of Leaving

By Lense Gebre-Mariam, The Dartmouth Staff

At times Dartmouth’s location can be a challenge for the student body’s many city-dwellers. The lack of exotic entertainment, diverse array of restaurants, shopping locales, hustle and bustle of everyday life and efficient public transportation can make Hanover, N.H. seem like the smallest four-block radius in one’s average city. More »