VOL. CLXXIV NO.90
RAIN HIGH 61 LOW 46
FRIDAY, MAY 26, 2017
HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE
Burglary, written Green Key sees fewest arrests in threat reported at four years after policy changes KDE sorority By ANTHONY ROBLES The Dartmouth Staff
By ANTHONY ROBLES The Dartmouth Staff
SPORTS
SENIOR SPRING: MEN’S SOCCER GOALIE JAMES HICKOK ’17 PAGE 8
A g raphic message threatening sexual violence was found inside Kappa Delta Epsilon sorority house Wednesday night. According to a campuswide email sent Wednesday night by Safety and Security, the department responded to a report of a possible burglary at a sorority house
around 7:50 p.m. that day. In the email, interim Safety and Security director Keysi Montás said a written message had been left that was “obscene and threatened sexual violence.” According to sources familiar with the incident, the message was found in the house’s basement. The SEE BURGLARY PAGE 2
VERBUM ULTIMUM: WASTED TIME PAGE 5
ARTS
DARTMOUTH DANCE ENSEMBLE TO PERFORM PAGE 7
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Safety and Security interim director Keysi Montás said that from Wednesday to Saturday, the department responded to 90 incidents. Last year, Safety and Security saw 88 incidents. Montás said that 18 were on Wednesday, 13 were on Thursday, 41 were on Friday and 18 were on Saturday. Montás said that the department dealt with six students over the course of those days whose state of intoxication did not warrant transportation to SEE GREEN KEY PAGE 2
EBAs closes following recent profit losses
By SUNPREET SINGH The Dartmouth Staff
OPINION
Green Key weekend arrests by the Hanover Police Department reached their lowest total in the past four years at only 10, down from 22 in 2016, 17 in 2015 and 34 in 2014. Hanover Police Chief Charlie Dennis said that the 10 arrests were alcohol-related, with the charges including public intoxication and unlawful possession of alcohol. While all of the arrests involved at least one of these two charges, Dennis said that some of the arrests had
additional charges. Dennis said there were two arrests on Thursday, four arrests on Friday, of which two were at the Green Key concert, four arrests on Saturday and no arrests on Sunday. Three of those arrested over the weekend were College students. “The same amount of Dartmouth students were dealt with, but there [were] less nonDartmouth students from last year to this year,” Dennis said. “I think part of that could be the fact that the concert was only open to Dartmouth students and their guests.”
Following months of financial struggles, local restaurant Everything But Anchovies abruptly closed on May 16. The restaurant was run by EBAs president Maureen Bogosian and her family since 1979 , serving pizza, burgers and wings and more to the Hanover and Dartmouth communities for 38 years. Hanover town manager Julia Griffin said she was not surprised
when she heard about the closure due to the changing face of EBAs’ competition. Griffin said that EBAs had been suffering from a loss in pizza delivery business ever since a Domino’s Pizza opened in West Lebanon and began offering delivery until 3 a.m. She added that while the arrival of the restaurant franchise hurt business for other local pizza places such as Ramunto’s Brick and Brew Pizzeria and C&A Pizza, they did not suffer losses as much as EBAs did because
Graduate housing will be assigned to undergrads By JULIAN NATHAN
The Dartmouth Staff
Thursday mor ning, dean of graduate and advanced studies Jon Kull announced in an email statement to the graduate student body that the North Park graduate housing will not be available to graduate and professional students this coming fall due to an “unprecedented” admissions yield for the undergraduate Class of
EBAs specialized in the late-night delivery business, which is Domino’s forte. Bogosian declined to comment. A May 5 article in The Dartmouth also reported that EBAs saw a 20 percent decline in late night deliveries following the opening of the Domino’s franchise last fall. Ramunto’s owner Tim Cullen added that Domino’s has corporate software and advertising resources, while EBAs was a local family business.
“They did a lot of late night pizza delivery and Domino’s offers specials upon specials upon specials and ... that’s not the best thing to do,” he said. “I think that you should stand by your product and not necessarily be discounting it all the time. I think that hurt EBAs a lot.” Ramunto’s felt the presence of Domino’s with an initial dip in profits but has since recovered, Cullen said. He added that his business has seen SEE EBAS PAGE 3
AROUND THE WORLD
2021. Historically, the 33-apartment, 111-bed housing cluster situated on the northeast corner of campus has housed first-year graduate students, according to g raduate student council vice president Christopher Carroll , who is a postdoctoral candidate in astronomy. In his email statement, Kull SEE HOUSING PAGE 5
TIFFANY ZHAI/THE DARTMOUTH SENIOR STAFF
Ingo Günther’s “World Processor” is currently displayed at the Hood Downtown.