Tuesday, April 30, 2002Tuesday Happenings:"What matters to me and why" noon, Tucker--Professor and writer Ernest Hebert speaks. "Artificial Intelligence" noon, Thornton Hall lounge--This week's philosophy lunch. "Kudos: Recognition and Motivation" 5:30 P.M., 212 Collis--A "Pillars" meeting. Topic: "Has your group had a great year, a great term? What better way to say thank you than a celebration for the membership! Not only will the group thank you, but it will keep the group going." "Lunchtime Gallery Talk" 12:30 P.M., Hood--Mark Reed, assistant professor of psychiatry and director of counseling, and Laura Rubinstein, "health educator," discuss why people use psychedelic drugs. "Academic Gala" 5:00 P.M., Commonground--The senior studio art majors exhibit, and several senior present their theses for the College president and community. Topics include: "A realistic novel about a young woman's summer traveling alone through Scotland;" "the local geopolitics of WalMart development in northern Vermont;" "a theory on immigrant women's shame;" and the always-entertaining "mechanical properties of articular cartilage as a biomaterial." "Dartmouth Sororities: A Look from Within" 7 P.M., Top of the Hop--Short speeches about sororities, on topics such as "body image and eating disorders to rape and abuse to being a minority woman and sisterhood at Dartmouth." "Men's Dinner" 7 P.M., 218 Collis--Les Lawrence, Lebanon High School football coach, speaks about coaching boys. "Omara Portuondo" 8 P.M., Spaulding Auditorium--The "Buena Vista Social Club" player performs ($5 Dartmouth students, $30 gen. admission). "Questioning and Curious" 8:15 P.M., Sanborn Poetry Room--"safe, confidential student discussion about sexual orientation, gender identity, midterms, life, spring." Safe? Posted by Andrew Grossman at 10:15 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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