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The Dartmouth
June 13, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
Former Dartmouth professor David Thomson's controversial new biography presents a rambling view of Nicole Kidman laced with fetishism and idolatry.
Arts

Courtesy of Rotten Tomatoes

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Courtesy of Barnes and Noble Former Dartmouth Film Studies Professor David Thomson's new book "Nicole Kidman" has been the subject of much speculation during the past few weeks.





Sports

Field hockey defeated by Yale, 3-1

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The Dartmouth field hockey team suffered a major setback in its Ivy League campaign this weekend, falling to Yale University 3-1 on a breezy Saturday afternoon at Scully-Fahey field.




Arts

Senior's play produced in Biloxi

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Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of articles profiling senior artists and their involvement in the arts at Dartmouth. In between classes and hurrying off to the shop to begin work on the set for the forthcoming Mainstage production "Far Away," Sarah Hughes '07 agreed to meet with The D for a brief interview regarding her extensive involvement in theater at Dartmouth. The winner of the 2006 Dodd Drama Prize, the president of WIRED!, the president of the Displaced Theater Organization, and one of just three theater majors in the Class of 2007, Hughes has certainly made her mark on Dartmouth theater. Hughes' approach to her passion for playwriting is quintessentially Dartmouth -- she has managed to pursue her love for the dramatic arts without entirely limiting her focus to them.




News

Women in Business convene over weekend at Tuck

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Prospective students, current students and former students gathered at Tuck Business School this weekend for the second annual Women in Business convention, which aimed at fostering connections between aspiring businesswomen and the school's alumni.



Opinion

Alpha Phi on campus

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To the Editor: I am writing in response to Thursday's article regarding Alpha Phi's rush ("Alpha Phi holds inaugural rush events," Oct.


Sports

Women's volleyball sweeps through Ivy League opponents

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Coming off a 3-1 performance last weekend in the Dartmouth Invitational, women's volleyball posted two decisive wins against Ivy rivals, upsetting Princeton in three games (30-27, 30-27, 30-27) before sweeping the University of Pennsylvania (30-25, 30-24, 30-27). The wins put Dartmouth in solid position for the rest of the season as the Big Green improved to a record of 8-6 overall, 2-2 Ivy. "These two wins have given us so much confidence and ambition for the rest of the season," middle blocker Nadine Parris '06 said.



News

Dorms incomplete, but students praise luxury

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Though unforeseen construction delays have inconvenienced many of the students in the new McLaughlin and Tuck Mall residence clusters, many students say new luxuries more than outweigh any annoyance caused by the ongoing construction. "There may be construction, but at the end of the day we realize how great things are here," McLane undergraduate advisor Brent Drummond '09 said.



Sports

One on One

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Men's diver Andrew Berry '08, Ivy League finalist, sits down with The D's resident Big Green sports enthusiast for a chat about coaching changes and abs.



News

Columbus marked by nighttime ceremony

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Native American students met in the middle of the Green at 12 a.m. Monday to remember Columbus Day with drums and music from the Occom Pond Singers, a campus musical group associated with the Native American community. The event is not a protest, but an opportunity to raise awareness about the unfortunate and generally overlooked consequences of Christopher Columbus' arrival in America, Native Americans at Dartmouth said. "The Columbus Day commemoration is recognition of over 500 years of colonialism exacted by foreign powers that continues in the form of ecological, social and political violence today," Tim Argetsinger '09 said at a NAD meeting. Native American studies professor Colin Calloway, who is of British descent, agrees that there is more to Columbus' arrival than the day reflects. "We have to recognize that [Columbus Day] is not just a success story, not just a story of nation building and triumph.