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The Dartmouth
July 6, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Hovey's to become art gallery

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The Hovey Murals, boarded over since 1983 because of their controversial depiction of Native Americans, will be placed on permanent display next year when their home in Thayer Hall's basement is converted into a new art gallery. The murals, located in Hovey's Pub, will become part of the College's art collection under control of the Hood Museum, which will develop educational materials describing the art and its history. Hovey's Pub is scheduled to be relocated to the basement of the new Collis Center. The administration's decision, announced in late June by Provost John Strohbehn, signals the possible resolution of more than two decades of controversy surrounding the murals. Painted in the late1930s by Walter B.




News

Dining hours cut for Summer term

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After 10:30 at night this summer, students will not be able to find a bite to eat on campus. All dining facilities are open this summer except Home Plate, and some of Home Plate's health food alternatives have been incorporated into Food Court.


News

Construction continues

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The two-year-old, $9.4 million steam tunnel project, designed to update an antiquated steam pipe system, recently reached its northward conclusion at Elm Street, and is now in its final stages, Buildings and Grounds Assistant Director John Gratiot said. "The above work ground of the project is virtually done," Gratiot said, and only beneath ground pipe installation, insulation and wiring remain.




Arts

Sleeping through Hanks' latests

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If viewers hadn't kept their eyes peeled waiting (and waiting, and waiting) for one of Tom Hanks' hilarious comic scenes in "Sleepless in Seattle," they probably would have been sleeping in their seats. And they wouldn't have missed much of the story.





News

Greek council officers elected

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Jen Main '95 of Delta Delta Delta sorority was elected summer president of the Co-ed Fraternity Sorority Council yesterday during elections for summer positions on the main Greek councils. The elections included posts for the CFSC and the Interfraternity and Panhellenic Councils. Jason Lombardelli '95, a member of Chi Gamma Epsilon fraternity, was elected vice president of the CFSC , and Tamara Busch '95, a member of Delta Gamma sorority, was elected Treasurer. David Shamberger '95, a member of Chi Gamma Epsilon fraternity, was elected as Student Assembly representative. Scott Swenson '95, a member of Gamma Delta Chi fraternity, was elected summer president of the IFC, the governing body of the College's fraternities. Claudia Ginsberg '95, was elected to the position of president of the Panhell, the governing body of the College's sororities. Main said she hopes to use the opportunity to make her experience with the Greek system more worthwhile. "One of they main goals we have is to promote the image of the Greek system," Main said.



News

College warns of mail bombs

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College security officials issued a safety alert yesterday cautioning professors about handling incoming mail after a letter bomb injured a Yale University computer science professor and a similar explosion wounded a professor of pediatrics at the University of California-San Francisco on Tuesday. Each of the professors received a letter-size, padded manila envelope containing some sort of explosive device. "All members of the Dartmouth community are urged to exercise special caution in handling incoming mail -- especially padded manila envelope containing some sort of explosive device. "All members of the Dartmouth community are urged to exercise special caution in handling incoming mail -- especially padded manila envelopes; packages that appear to contain plastic boxes, copper tubing or batteries," the Office of Safety and Security wrote in the alert, which was sent electronically to all of the College's electronic mail users. The 38-year-old Yale University computer scientisis, David Gelertner, was severely injured in the abdomin, chest, face and hands after he opened the mail bomb in his office at 8:15 yesterday morning. Dr. Charles Epstein, a geneticist and an expert on Down's Syndrome and Alzheimer's disease at the University of California-San Francisco, lost several fingers when a letter bomb exploded at his home. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Postal Service and the Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms are investigating the bombings. In San Francisco, an F.B.I.




News

Trustees appointed; Three women on 16-member board

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Dartmouth's Trustees officially named two journalists to the Board at their spring meeting Commencement weekend and announced that a former Trustee will serve a special two year term. David Shribman '76, the Washington bureau chief for The Boston Globe and Susan Dentzer '77, economic columnist and chief economic correspondent for U.S.




Arts

'Jurassic Park' frightens and delights

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The Jurassic period, according to history textbooks, was not renowned for etiquette or polite manners. In the recently released "Jurassic Park,"a delegation from that time in the Mesozoic era makes a general mess of their tropical island home, ignores traffic rules, eats people and spits. Mammals began to evolve just before the Jurassic, 215 million years ago,but they never made it past the nocturnal, tree-dwelling, embarrassing rat-like stage until the dinosaurs became extinct.