Monday, May 06, 2002Monday Happenings: "Everything at Dartmouth after 11 A.M." (or so)"Richard Gephardt" 4 P.M. Location Unannounced--The House minority leader speaks. Hey, Dems: great job publicising this thing... "Rabbis, Romans, and Jesus in the Galillee: Recent Discoveries at Sepphoris" 4 P.M., 1 Rockefeller--Eric Meyers, Professor of Religion at Duke University, speaks. "Religion and Ethnicity in Africa's Wars" 4 P.M., 2 Rockefeller--Steven Ellis of Leiden University speaks. "I Am an American. I am a Muslim" 5 P.M., 105 Dartmouth--Part of "Islamic Awareness Week." Student panel discussion. "Monday Night Dinner" 6:30 P.M., Amarna--Dine with prof. Christopher Sneddon, assistant professor of geography and environmental studies. "Room Draw I" 6:30 P.M., Leede Arena--Priority Numbers 801-1000. "Let's Talk About Sex Series" 7 P.M., Tindle Lounge--"Come find out more about Sex Toys from 'sexpert' Megara Bell of Grand Opening Sex Shop in Boston." No live demonstrations, hopefully. "Scout's Honor" 7 P.M., Filene Auditorium (Moore)--"The award-winning documentary about anti-gay discrimination in the Boy Scouts," introduced by Dave Rice, "the former California scoutmaster whose story is depicted in the film." "Paul Galbraith" 7 P.M., Rollins--"Works by Bach and Debussy are on the program for the internationally acclaimed guitarist, known for interpreting the classics on his eight-string guitar." Discussion to follow ($5 Dartmouth students, $22 gen. admission). "Multifaith Panel Discussion" 7 P.M., 28 Silsby--"Six Dartmouth students from various faith backgrounds will be answering questions and talking about their faiths and spiritual perspectives." "Room Draw II" 8:30 P.M., Leede Arena--Priority Numbers 1001-1500. Posted by Andrew Grossman at 12:01 PM Comments Post a Comment (we enforce our comments policy) |
Dartlog ToolsHanover NewsDartmouth LinksNota BeneArticles of note—culled from the Internet by TDR. A hyperrealist's defense? Thanksgiving: Adam Kirsch landed on his feet. Grim. How important is the libretto? Nothing thrills a classical music crowd more than a new piece of music that doesn't make them physically ill. Dartmouth BlogsFavorites
Advertisement |
|
Copyright © 1996-2008 The Dartmouth Review |
|