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The Dartmouth
May 5, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
Opinion

My Daily Battle

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It's high noon, a drop of sweat slides down my brow, and I enter the gauntlet. Between the detectors, past the plaster walls and into the stacks I stride.




Sports

Strong season finale for men's rugby team

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On a crystal clear, beautiful New Hampshire spring day, the Dartmouth Rugby Football Club ended its official Spring season by beating Northeastern University 27-10, but the game was actually much more lopsided than the result would indicate.


Opinion

Trust No One

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They called the Gulf War the first war fought on TV, but they never dreamed that war would be fought through TV.


Opinion

On Offensive Expression

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To the Editor: In his letter to the editor on May 3, "A Misunderstanding," Jon Hollander '03 compares a "Dartmouth Indian" T-shirt with a T-shirt reading "World Trade Center victims got what they deserved" to show that wearing either of the shirts "victimizes those who have suffered." Thus, he says, the debate is not about speech, because wearing either of these T-shirts is, though legal, morally abhorrent.


News

Scherr hints at new student space

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Provost Barry Scherr discussed the possibility of a new student social space in North Fairbanks Hall and Assembly members distributed a number of faculty awards last night at the Student Assembly's first meeting since general elections were held last week. Student Body President-elect Janos Marton '04 and Vice President-elect Julia Hildreth '05 also addressed the Assembly briefly during the meeting, though the newly-elected leaders will not begin serving their terms until the fall. Scherr explained that space in the basement of North Fairbanks Hall -- which is located immediately behind the Massachusetts Row dormitories -- will soon face conversion to either a student-run dance club or a studio for use by the College's Film and Television Studies program and other organizations. The change is partly in response to a general shortage of space on campus, Scherr said, but is intended to address an "immediate need" for both studio and social spaces. Though Scherr said a decision on the use of the space could occur "within a week or two," a final determination will hinge on a number of logistical factors and whether a second suitable space can be found. "We would have to spend reasonable amounts of money to renovate the building" were it to be converted to a dance club, Scherr said, adding that the noise from such a area might interfere with the work of College staff in upstairs offices. In response to the questions of Assembly members regarding how a new dance club would prove any superior to the poorly-attended Poison Ivy dance club in Collis, Scherr said the new facility would benefit from being farther removed from the center of campus. "In terms of location, the space is probably best for a dance club," Scherr said.



News

Dawdi defends a peaceful Islam

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Professor Jama A. Dadwi of St. Mary's University in Halifax, Canada, provided an in-depth and positive look at the realities behind Islamic concepts such as peace, brotherhood and Jihad in last night's most recent Islamic Awareness Week event. Beginning his defense of Islam, entitled "Islam, Peace and Sept.


News

College to shuffle Robinson offices

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Beginning next fall, student organizations will be able to hold office space in Robinson Hall only if selected through a newly instituted application process. All student organizations -- whether they currently hold space in Robinson Hall or not -- will be required to complete a formal application by May 15 in order to acquire or retain office space in Robinson Hall for the 2002-2003 academic year. The change was propelled by complaints from student groups who have been unable to gain office space in Robinson Hall, according to Patrick Connelly, assistant director of the Collis Student Center. The application process will "allow greater access and greater accessibility to offices in Robinson for all student groups," Connelly said. "We've received numerous requests from student groups who are looking for space to be able to maximize their programs," he explained. Although Connelly said he did not know how many groups will submit applications, he noted that his announcement has generated much reaction from student organizations. "If the feedback we've received so far is any indication, I think we're going to be receiving an overwhelming number of responses," he said. Once received, the applications will be reviewed by a committee of students -- drawn from the Committee on Student Organizations, Student Assembly, the Graduate Student Association and the Collis Center Governing Board -- and administrators. Group membership, visible annual contributions to the Dartmouth community and utilization of current and future space will all factor into the committee's recommendations. The recommendations will then be submitted to Collis director Joe Cassidy, who will ultimately decide which organizations receive space in Robinson Hall. Organizations currently housed in Robinson Hall will receive no preferential treatment in the application process, Connelly said. "This year we're starting from scratch," he said.



Opinion

Coeducating ORL

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The decision for Dartmouth to become coeducational was a good one for the College. On that point, students, administrators and faculty would agree almost unanimously.


Sports

Dartmouth enters ECAC tourney looking for gold

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Will the third time be a charm? That is what the Dartmouth softball team is hoping as it looks forward to a third consecutive appearance in the East Coast Athletic Conference Tournament, which takes place next Saturday and Sunday at Soldier Field in Cambridge, Mass. The conference confirmed widely held speculation when it announced the field for this year's tournament early yesterday afternoon from the league headquarters on Cape Cod. All four participants are from the Ivy League.



News

Soft-spoken Marton '04 readies for presidency

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People have told Janos Marton '04 that being Student Body President will look good on his resume, but Marton says he won't capitalize on his political experience anytime soon. After graduation, he hopes to be a "wandering writer" and finish the novel he is currently working on.


News

NYU prof. delivers Zantop lecture

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All Americans --whether directly involved or not -- were profoundly affected by the events of September 11, according to New York University professor Diana Taylor. Taylor addressed a packed Filene Auditorium yesterday afternoon in the inaugural Susanne Zantop Memorial Lecture. The Zantop Memorial Lecture is sponsored by the comparative literature department and honors Susanne Zantop, one of the founders of Dartmouth's master program in comparative literature. Taylor, currently a professor of performance studies at NYU, was a close friend of Susanne Zantop and is a former member of the Dartmouth faculty. Before the event, there were several people hugging and kissing one another on the cheek, making one forget about the tragic events of the Zantop killings and Sept.


News

Campus' fav. hobby: BlitzMail

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Some regard it as spiritual, others as addictive. No matter how they describe BlitzMail, however, Dartmouth students certainly send a lot of it. The BlitzMail system -- an email program developed at Dartmouth -- has long been popular enough to surpass telephone and sometimes even face-to-face communication. Over 150,000 messages are sent each day, according to Director of Computing Services Bill Brawley.


Opinion

Star Wars!

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Week after week I try to write about issues of national or even global importance. Today I will attempt to outdo myself and write a column of intergalactic proportions A not-so-long time ago, in a town not so far away, a "Star Wars" fan was born.


Arts

Galbraith meets mixed reviews

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In its program notes for the Paul Galbraith performance Sunday night, the Hopkins Center called his style a "groundbreaking development in the history of classical guitar." But before you imagine "groundbreaking developments" as if they were somehow grand revelations or massive revolutions, note these key words: "classical guitar." Classical guitarists are distinguished from the likes of Jimi Hendrix primarily by the manufacture of the guitar itself and the fact that classical guitarists use their fingers only, not guitar picks. Galbraith actually did bring major changes to the world of classical guitar.


News

Fake IDs' ease of fabrication worries police, businesses

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Students have been using fake IDs to purchase alcohol since IDs were first made, but a new methods for producing fake IDs have piqued the interest of liquor store owners, law enforcement officials and club owners alike. The new trend on college campuses nationwide of students using personal computers to create fake IDs authentic-looking enough to impress even experts is a problem that has alcohol-serving establishments and police worried. "There are a million ways to make them.