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The Dartmouth
September 20, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Opinion

Fight Mt. Washington pollution

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Although Mt. Washington is not an active volcano, it belches smoke all summer long. Viewed from a distance, New England's highest peak is one of the most easily distinguished landmarks in the state of New Hampshire.


News

Terp named new assistant dean

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Dean of the College Lee Pelton recently appointed Janet Terp as assistant dean of the College for administration. Terp is the former acting director of public programs and campaign events at the College. The appointment comes after the resignation in May of former Associate Dean Barbara Strohbehn, who worked in the office for 12 years. Terp will assume some of Strohbehn's responsibilities and the rest will be divided among members of the Dean's Office, Pelton said. Terp, who served as assistant director of public programs, declined an offer in December to become the full-time director of public programs, she said. Pelton said Terp has a working knowledge of the College administration and how to interact with different offices and departments at Dartmouth, which were qualities he looked for in the job search. "She brings two things to the job," Pelton said.


News

Bollinger: Parkhurst's newest kid

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Lee Bollinger, who has been provost for a little more than a week now, is very much the new kid on the administrative block. Last week, the humidity had gotten to him so much that he contemplated climbing on a chair in his office to turn on a fan, before a secretary informed him that a light switch would do the trick. And just as Bollinger is still feeling his way around the office, he is also trying to get a sense of what Dartmouth and its provost position is all about. When asked about Bollinger's performance so far,College President James Freedman said, "Oh, I've just been delighted.


News

Hanover blacked out

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Hanover, West Lebanon and surrounding areas suffered a complete failure of electrical power Saturday night after a protective relay was struck by lightening, officials at Granite State Power Company said yesterday. Roughly half of the company's 5800 customers, including all College buildings, were without electricity from 11:07 p.m.


Opinion

Follow in the footsteps

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With his arrival in Hanover, Provost Lee Bollinger has the opportunity to direct the evolution of the College in a number of important areas. Bollinger, as he continues the College's work to increase the beneficial interaction between the graduate schools and the undergraduates, should do so with the goal of enhancing Dartmouth's liberal arts education. Although many students come to Dartmouth because of the readily available opportunities to interact with professors -- an aspect of the College that should not be undervalued -- the College's undergraduate experience should not be compromised by faculty research. Bollinger should also continue the efforts of his predecessors and peers to foster intellectualism that have come in part from College President James Freedman's desire to explore the "life of the mind" and from Dean of the Faculty James Wright's push for a new curriculum. During the past eight years, members of the administration have worked individually and in unison to promote intellectualism on campus and Bollinger should join them. But intellectual growth is not limited to the classroom. The College is in need of a new dormitory so that everyone who wants to benefit from the camaraderie residence halls can provide is able to do so. This fall, 3,904 students will be in residence and the College faces the possibility of more than 150 students being denied housing. Bollinger, who is the chief financial officer at the College, should consider the housing needs of a residential college when determining the College's financial priorities. If the College starts budgeting money now, a new residence hall could be built in the near future, saving the College from the complaints of students with no beds. Plans for further development should also include more student space. Student organizations that need space currently can not get it.


Arts

Morriss' art now on display

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From July 12 through August 22, the Upper Jewett Corridor of the Hopkins Center for the Performing Arts will host a new exhibition of modern art by Annette Morriss. The exhibit will contain 21 works done in conte pencil and charcoal.


News

Stewart '96 en route to full recovery

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Jon Stewart '96, who fell out of a window at Alpha Delta fraternity in April, is resting at home in Ohio and said he will soon be fully recovered. After a seven-week stay at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Stewart was released on June 6. "I'm carrying on a pretty normal lifestyle," he said in a reccent telephone interview.


News

Chionuma: a campus activist

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Grace Chionuma '96 certainly was not a shoe-in for the job. She readily admits as much: "This is the last thing I thought I'd be doing sophomore summer." Before she even took office, she was engulfed by controversy. But such is life when you are selected to be president of the Student Assembly, even if it is only for the Summer term. At the time of her appointment, Chionuma was not a member of the Assembly.


Opinion

Shawmut Bank symbol is offensive to some students

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To the Editor: In your article on the Shawmut Bank take over ("Shawmut Bank takes over," June 30, 1994) you included the opinion of one Native American student who does not mind the bank's Indian symbol. Everyone has their own personal opinion about Indian symbols such as the Washington Redskins and the "Dartmouth Indian" and these opinions are not necessarily dictated by one's ethnic background. However, there are many people on this campus who are bothered by the Shawmut logo. When closing my account there, I explained to the bank manager that as long as stereotypes like these exist, more people will become desensitized to ignorance and racism, passed on to the next generation. It is a matter of passive exposure: violence that does not affect us --on televison or in movies -- can desensitize us to violence. Shawmut bank obviously sees their logo as a harmless caricature, but the targets of the discrimination perpetuated in this manner do not find this harmless. The small amount of money I withdrew from Shawmut will not effect the bank at all.


News

Tuck dean search committee forms

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Deputy Provost Bruce Pipes recently appointed members to a 10-person search committee to find a new dean for the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration. The creation of the committee, which has not yet met, follows the appointment of former Tuck Dean Colin Blaydon as the interim director. Edward Fox resigned as dean of the Tuck School when he was denied a second four-year term after what administration members called a standard review. Business Administration Professor Robert Hansen will lead the committee composed of six Tuck professors, three members of the school's Board of Overseers and one undergraduate professor. Besides Hansen, the committee members include Tuck Overseers Jim Allwin, Phil Benton and Jack Byrne, Economics Professor Steve Venti and Business Management Professor Frederick Webster. Tuck professors Karla Bourland, Vijay Govindarajan, Kevin Maloney and Clyde Stickney are also on the committee. "The committee is very good, very solid," Hansen said last night.


News

Police continue investigation

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A sales slip found at the Old Dartmouth Cemetery took Hanover Police to a local store in search of the vandals who caused about $10,000 worth of damage to tombstones in the early morning hours on June 23. Police say the vandals had a party and then overturned 13 headstones, destroying five. Hanover Police Detective Rick Paulsen said last night that he questioned a clerk at Stinson's Village Store yesterday about the sales receipt. Paulsen said he suspected the beer was bought at Stinson's, but added that the clerk was unsure if the beer was actually purchased from the store. Paulsen said the clerk gave the police the tape made by the store's video camera the night before the vandalism. But police discovered yesterday that the camera had not been functioning and the tape was blank, Paulsen said. On Tuesday, Hanover Police Sergeant Chris O'Connor said the police discovered the sales receipt for beer in a brown bag found on the knoll at the graveyard. The knoll was littered with cigarettes and empty beer cans, O'Connor said.


Opinion

Solve housing crunch

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The College must stop ignoring the annual fall housing crunch and do something to alleviate it instead of telling students that it "will do what it can" to help them find off-campus living arrangements. There were 423 students on the Office of Resdidential Life's Fall-term housing waitlist at the beginning of the summer and 278 were still on it this past Wednesday. Housing Assignments Administrator Lynn Rosenblum said she expects only about 100 spots to open up between now and the beginning of fall, leaving almost 180 students to forage for off-campus housing. And this is not an isolated incident.


News

Freedman leaves for three-week vacation

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College President James Freedman departs this morning for a three-week vacation in Cape Cod, Mass., leaving new Provost Lee Bollinger as acting president. Freedman said he usually goes on long weekends during the summer, but decided to take a longer vacation this year because "we thought this year it was important to get away, to store up on rest." Freedman was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer in April and has completed four of his prescribed eight rounds of chemotherapy. "I'm excited just to have peace and quiet, and not to have the telephone ringing," he said.


News

College loses lawsuit

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A U.S. District Court judge is currently considering a jury recommendation that the College pay a former employee $60,000 because she was fired two years ago after she complained of discrimination while working at the Hanover Inn. A final decision on the punitive damages will not be made for one month, after both sides have submitted arguments responding to the recommendation. Catherine Whitcomb, of Hartland, Vt., filed a suit in Oct.


News

Possible Demko successor to visit

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Three of the final candidates to replace Geography Professor George Demko, who recently completed his five-year term as director of the Rockefeller Center for the Social Sciences, will be on campus in the next three weeks. Associate Dean of Faculty George Wolford, who heads the search committee looking for Demko's replacement, said the short list is down to about five candidates. The committee has been looking since late February, Wolford said. Wolford said Jack Dovidio from Colgate University, Linda Fowler of Syracuse University and Ted MacDonald of Harvard are three of the five candidates for position.


Sports

Distance runners are in for the long haul

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While many Dartmouth summer dwellers lay motionless beneath the sun in their free time, others must keep circling the Green in their training for marathon competition. Erika Meitner '96 said she decided she would train in preparation for a marathon in the spring of 1995.



News

Hersh selected to head counseling

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The College appointed Dr. Jeffrey Hersh as the director of counseling and human development, after conducting a nationwide search. Hersh is the former head of the mental health division at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Director of College Health Services John Turco announced the appointment yesterday after a search committee, created at the end of spring, presented a list of candidates. As director of counseling and human development, Hersh will oversee a counseling staff that advises Dartmouth students and also acts as an intermediary between the staff and the department of psychiatry at the Dartmouth Medical School, Turco said. Turco said Hersh, who started yesterday part-time and will start full-time Sept.


News

278 waiting on fall housing list

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The College may not be able to house more than 150 students for the 1994 Fall term, Housing Assignments Administrator Lynn Rosenblum said yesterday. Only 145 students canceled their cluster assignment by the June 8 deadline, leaving 278 students on the College housing waitlist. "We were a little disappointed with the number of cancellations," Rosenblum said.


News

Alumnus to get fourth star

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President Bill Clinton nominated Air Force Lt. Gen. Thomas Moorman '62 for his fourth star and a promotion to vice chief of staff of the Air Force. Moorman said he is awaiting confirmation of his appointment, which he expects to come before the end of July. Moorman is currently vice-commander of the Air Force Space Command, headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colo. The general said he found out about the nomination while on a plane to Vandenberg Air Force base in California. "General Merril McPeak, the Air Force chief of staff, called me on May 3," Moorman said in a telephone interview from the Colorado Springs air base.