Thursday, April 25, 2002Thursday Happenings: (delayed by IE-Mac)"Looking Back, Moving Forward" noon, Commonground--Student activist meeting. Topic: "Why are we such nice and kind people acting on behalf of others?" "Poetry and Prose" 4 P.M., Wren Room--Poet David Wojahn, director of the University of Indiana's creative writing program, reads. A sample. "The Healing God: The Evolution of Cult and Medicine at the Sanctuary of Asklepios" 4 P.M., 105 Dartmouth--Vasillis Lambrinoudakis speaks. "Michelangelo: The Aristocrat as Artist" 4 P.M., 13 Carpenter--William Wallace speaks. "Theorizing Resistance in Early Modern Europe" 4 P.M., 217 Dartmouth--Stanford's Roland Green speaks. "The Asian-American Multi-Racial Experience" 6 P.M., Casque and Gauntlet--Student discussion on people who identify themselves with many hyphens. "PoliTalk" 6:30 P.M., 209 Rockefeller--That evil LePen, Earth Day, Al Gore, that evil Bush, and Jenin: a bit one-sided, non? "Meet the Candidates" 7 P.M., Tindle Lounge--Candidates for the various class councils and the SA give speeches. If a tree falls in the forest and nobody... "Earth" (film) 7 P.M., Loew--"The story of an 8-year-old Parsee girl with a Hindu nanny and Muslim playmates is a vehicle for a chilling exploration of how ordinary people are sucked into religious and sectarian hatred" ($5 Dartmouth students, $6 gen. admission). "Pre-med discussion" 7 P.M., Shabazz Lounge--Meet "several black medical students." "Brian Jacobs Live" 8 P.M., Spaulding--In the most advertised event of the year, senior Brian Jacobs presents his senior thesis and new CD. "MixedMedia" 9 P.M., Top of the Hop--"An AREA exhibit foregrounding the intersection of the Visual Arts and Writing." Featuring a cash bar, turntables, and performance art. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 9:27 AM Comments Post a Comment (we enforce our comments policy) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. Nothing thrills a classical music crowd more than a new piece of music that doesn't make them physically ill. "Irony, it turns out, does cross the Hudson River." You don't say. Child rape, pt. II. Moral Hypocrisy What's worse: killing someone, or raping a child? Did Aristotle steal his works from the Egyptians? A theory rebutted. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
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