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The Dartmouth
December 21, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia

Opinion

Clarifying the AOA e-mail

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To the Editor: The Dartmouth's editorial staff should check with their own writers to get their facts straight before forming and presenting opinions ("An Old Tradition Fails, Again," Oct.


Opinion

Blog Wars: Alumni Lawsuit

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The College on the Hill is an idyllic setting for an education and for the formation of life-long bonds of friendship, but I and many others were ready to move on when we graduated.


Opinion

The Art of the Fratty Girl

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As this year's beloved Homecoming weekend approaches, in sync with perfect fall weather and visibly heightened anticipation, I can't help but feel nostalgic as I remember my own freshman Homecoming weekend, when I was so naive, and so utterly clueless.


Sports

The Glove: Understandable Apathy

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I'm an absolute sports junkie. If I weren't, I wouldn't be writing this column. I also happen to be the son of a Dartmouth-educated father, whose first stuffed animal was a teddy bear with a Dartmouth green sweater with a large white D on it (originally enough, I named him "D-Bear.") Unlike most people out there, I was brought up looking for Dartmouth football/basketball scores on the ESPN crawl at the bottom of the television.


Jarrod Shoemaker '04 crosses the finish line carrying the American flag at the 2005 World Championships.
Sports

Shoemaker '04 headed to Olympics

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Courtesy of jarrodshoemaker.com While the 2004 Olympics were going on in Athens, Greece, Jarrod Shoemaker '04 had just graduated from Dartmouth and was just getting his feet wet in the world of triathlons.


Fans can name their own price for Radiohead's new album,
Arts

Radiohead sticks it to The Man, impresses fans

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Courtesy of Harp Magazine "How come I end up where I started?" sings Radiohead's Thom Yorke to kick off their newest album, "In Rainbows." In many ways it is a signal of what is to come over the next ten tracks, in Radiohead's most accessible and simple album since 1995's "The Bends." On "In Rainbows," Yorke and company return to making music for the sake of music, instead of allowing experimentation or politics to rule the record. Still, despite being more lyrically accessible and in many ways more mainstream, "In Rainbows" does not ignore Radiohead's technical and stylistic expansion over the past 12 years.


News

Daily Debriefing

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The founder of Business Wire, Lorry Lokey, recently donated $74.5 million to the University of Oregon, which is the largest academic gift the university has ever received, The Chronicle of Higher Education said.



News

"Historical detective" prof. dates calendars

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History professor Richard Kremer has a bit of a strange hobby. In his free time, he tries to identify the anonymous astronomers of the past using medieval book-bindings to peer into the mathematics of preceding centuries. Kremer's research focuses on a 700-year period in astronomy between the work of the ancient Greeks and Copernicus.



News

Macs gain ground on campus

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"Sexymac" is the name Kathleen Onufer '08 gave the Macbook computer she purchased last spring. Onufer was a first-time Mac buyer who previously owned a Dell purchased from Dartmouth her freshman year.


News

Student Assembly funds three campus projects

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Tuesday night's Student Assembly meeting focused on the passage of three funding proposals: the Thanksgiving and winter break New York City bus service, the laptop voucher program and the Pangea program. According to Neil Kandler '09, co-vice president of the Assembly's Student Services Committee, the aim of the New York City bus service has been to provide a more affordable means of public transportation for the hundreds of Dartmouth students heading to the city during the Thanksgiving and winter holiday seasons.



Stonyfield Farms President and CE-Yo Gary Hirshberg discusses corporate environmental responsibility Tuesday afternoon at the Rockefeller Center.
News

CE-Yo extols virtues of green biz

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Erin Jaeger / The Dartmouth Gary Hirshberg, Stonyfield Farms president and CE-Yo (as in yogurt), spoke about the importance of running environmentally responsible businesses on Tuesday afternoon in the Rockefeller Center. "The question we asked ourselves when we were starting the company was, 'is it possible to have enterprise that was part of the solution, and not part of the problem?'" Hirshberg said in his lecture.



News

Daily Debriefing

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The Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics hosted over 130 representatives from colleges all over the country to discuss the balance between intercollegiate sports and academics, the Chronicle of Higher Education reported Tuesday.


News

DDS pushes to hire more students

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With 13 locations on campus and only 111 student workers employed this fall, Dartmouth Dining Services is struggling to hire students in its efforts to keep operations running smoothly.


Sports

Men's golf recovers from weak opening round, finishes sixth

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The men's golf team continued its strong fall season last weekend at the ECAC Men's Division I Championships, finishing sixth out of the 14-team field. The team posted the low score of the second day, but was done in by an uncharacteristically poor first round. Davis Mullany '11 was only two strokes behind the leader after the opening round of the tournament and had a real shot at winning his second individual trophy of the fall before a tough finish on the second day. Mullany was, for the fourth time this fall, Dartmouth's top individual finisher, placing 10th overall with an impressive first round of 70 on a par 71 course, and finishing with a total score of 148. Not far behind Mullany were teammates Jamie Wallace '08, Dave Putney '10 and Rob Henley '09 who shot 153, 154 and 155 respectively. Wallace finished tied for 23rd, Putney finished tied for 28th and Henley finished tied for 36th. While the finishes from the trio were certainly respectable, the total scores are somewhat misleading.