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The Dartmouth
September 18, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Graduation anxieties tax seniors

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With graduation and what lies beyond fast approaching for the Class of 1994, seniors' anxieties about the future are mounting as deadlines for graduate school and corporate recruiting interviews approach. Every senior class faces the same pressures.


News

Bosnian diplomat cancels speech

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Muhamed Sacirbey, the ambassador from Bosnia-Herzegovina to the United Nations, canceled a speech scheduled for last night in Cook Auditorium. Sacirbey was unable to speak because he was called to an urgent meeting in Washington, D.C., according to a statement released by Sabine Freizer '94, president of the World Affairs Council, one of the groups that is sponsoring Sacirbey's visit. "We are very disappointed he didn't come, but we understand under the circumstances," said Meghan Dunleavy '94, the council's vice president. Sacirbey now plans to speak here on Tuesday, November 10, Freizer said.


Sports

Field hockey ends successful season

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A relatively short amount of time has passed since first-year coach Julie Dayton arrived in Hanover to try and salvage something -- anything -- positive out of the 1993 field hockey season. There were some who had all but written off the season before it even began.


News

SA chips in for Guinier's visit

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The Student Assembly last night decided to donate $500 to help bring Lani Guinier to the College. Guinier, who President Bill Clinton unsuccessfully nominated to the post of Solicitor General in charge of civil rights, will deliver a speech called "What I Would Have Said" in January. The speech will be sponsored by the Women's Resource Center. The center originally asked the Assembly for $2,500.


News

Students cited for activism; '94s Keefe, Bingenheimer win environmental awards

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Two Dartmouth seniors and an alumni won awards from the Dartmouth Environmental Network for their contributions to environmental causes. John French III '55, Bart Bingenheimer '94 and Jessica Keefe '94, were cited by the group for their outstanding efforts in helping the environment. French, a New York City attorney with Beveridge and Diamond law firm, received the Dartmouth Environmental Network Award, which is presented annually to a College graduate, professor or staff member. Bingenheimer and Keefe each won a Student Achievement Award, which is presented to Dartmouth seniors who have worked on environmental issues outside of the classroom. The network was established in 1990 by a group of Dartmouth alumni, students, faculty, and staff who have an interest in the environment. The group presented its awards at the annual Environmental Issues Symposium at Moosilauke Ravine Lodge.


News

New curriculum likely for 1998s; $8 million bequest will help implement new package of required courses

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The chair of the Will to Excel capital campaign yesterday said an $8 million donation will allow the implementation of a new curriculum that was delayed last spring because of a lack of funds. College Trustee Dick Page, who chairs the $425 million capital campaign, yesterday said the Board of Trustees had decided to use part of the gift, willed to the College by the wife of the late Harvey Hood '18, for the new curriculum. "The income from the $8 million will be in part used to help implement the new curriculum," he said. Administrators predicted that the new curriculum will be in place by September for the entering Class of 1998. The curriculum was originally planned for the Class of 1997, but was postponed last spring because the endowment portion of the capital campaign was not growing fast enough. Endowment funds will pay for at least 16 additional tenure-track professors to fully staff seminars and other courses required by the new curriculum. The first overhaul of the curriculum in more than 70 years will radically change the structure of a Dartmouth education and, according to Dean of Faculty James Wright, will cost approximately $1.5 million a year. Registrar Thomas Bickel said yesterday that the new curriculum will most likely be in place for the Class of 1998. The new requirements will fundamentally change the courses students will have to take to graduate from the College.


Sports

Field hockey ends successful season

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Two weeks ago the Dartmouth women's rugby club travelled to the University of Massachuseets in Amherst, Mass., to combat other New England teams for the Mayor's Cup in the Beantown Tournament. After two days of play, the club came home with the second place trophy after losing in the finals against the University of Connecticut. Aggressive rugby brought the team to the finals.


News

Official says Mideast treaty helps U.S.

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The recent peace agreement between the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel will help the United States secure its interests in the Middle East, according to a State Department official who spoke here yesterday. Marc Sievers, who works for the State Department's Bureau of Near-Eastern Affairs and the office of Arab and Israeli Affairs, said the accord "can be a win-win situation -- both sides can benefit in real ways." The treaty between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization, known as the Declaration of Principles, will help extinguish internal conflicts and will help find regional solutions for conflicts, Sievers said. Sievers said the State Department views the Declaration of Principles as an instrument to implement change between Arabs and Israel. American interests in the Middle East include access to oil, insuring Israeli security and securing stability for the existing governments in the region, he said. The American role in peace negotiations is crucial since it is a dominant extra-regional power, Sievers said. American duties include slowing the proliferation of nuclear and chemical weapons, doling out economic assistance and establishing more regional cooperation among countries, Sievers said. But he said not all reviews of the new accord have been positive. Arabs and Israelis have opposing views of what the agreement means and how it should be implemented.


News

'94 class council forms task force on women

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A new task force will study the status of women at Dartmouth after more than two decades of co-education. Class of 1994 President Dan Garodnick is forming a Task Force on the Status of Women at Dartmouth to "examine how far this campus has come in being a hospitable place to women since becoming co-educational 21 years ago," Garodnick said. The task force will address questions of whether men and women have similar opportunities on campus, if women on campus are facing the same problems as when Dartmouth first admitted them 21 years ago and if both sexes are able to fulfill their college expectations at Dartmouth. The group will convene at the beginning of the Winter term and will submit a final report to Dean of Students Lee Pelton in June 1994.




Sports

Penn, Princeton set for battle; Both teams undefeated, tied for first in the Ivy League

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After weeks of picking up momentum for the showdown of the year in Ivy League football, Penn and Princeton, both 7-0 overall, 4-0 Ivy League, finally set their collision course in stone this weekend. It's been 25 years since two undefeated Ivy League teams played each other this late in the season, and it looks like Saturday's rumble in Philadelphia will be worth the wait. Penn has the league's highest scoring offense.


Opinion

Family support

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A week ago today, Dan Boyer '94 took his own life. Yesterday, friends and family gathered for a service of "celebration and thanksgiving." It is difficult to find words to describe the beauty of what happened in Rollins Chapel yesterday.




News

Snow hits Hanover

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Only 24 hours after the Homecoming bonfire roared in the center of the Green, students had a chance to play in the first snow of the year. Although to some the first flakes seemed to come too soon this year, meteorologists from the National Weather Service said the snow is not particularly early. A cold jetstream from Canada brought the snow to Hanover, said Geography Professor Vincent Malmstrom. If the present weather pattern persists, the Upper Valley might see a six-week snowy spell, Malmstrom said. But according to the 1994 edition of The Old Farmer's Almanac, "November through March is expected to be milder than normal.




News

Asbestos removed from old hospital

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As part of the $1.9 million renovations on the old Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital, Facilities Operations and Management removed large quantities of asbestos. The building "has been mothballed," said Brenda Freeland, a drafter and asbestos coordinator with Facilities Operations and Management. Facilities Management removed asbestos from ceiling tiles, steam piping, wire coverings and from plaster in the walls of the oldest parts of the 100-year old hospital, Freeland said. Martha O'Brien of DEMTEC, the contractors in charge of the removal, said they removed "dumpsters of asbestos." Asbestos, a cancer-causing substance previously used as insulation, is removed before the demolition of buildings to prevent its dispersal into the air. Now all that remains in the buildings are the radiation and oncology department of the Norris Cotton Cancer Center on the first floor and various College offices on the second floor. Asbestos was not removed from the radiation department because of the sensitivity of the instruments operating there, Freeland said. Once the department has relocated, the remaining asbestos should take between four and five months to remove, Freeland said. Facilities Management has sealed the rest of the building and turned off the power. "For now our policy is to maintain the building until its demolition in two to three years," Freeland said. Contractors will begin bidding for the demolition in about a year, Freeland said. The radiation treatment department of the Norris Cotton Cancer Center will remain in the old hospital until a new $14.1 million building in the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center is ready in the next three years. The hospital was relocated to the DHMC after the town of Hanover rejected expansion plans for the old hospital in 1986.