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The Dartmouth
December 26, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Maynard construction to begin soon

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The beginning of the end of Dartmouth's housing crunch will kick off next week ,when construction workers barricade the large parking lot north of Maynard Street, Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman told the Student Assembly Tuesday night. Speaking at the Assembly's weekly meeting, Redman said the $66 million construction of two new residential complexes will take about two years and will add some 500 beds to Dartmouth's housing system. The plan will likely be bankrolled entirely by the College's new capital campaign, marking a departure from previous financing, which was based solely on rent fees, Redman said. Redman now estimates that the 342-bed McLaughlin residential cluster, which will take up the Maynard lot and be slightly larger than the East Wheelock cluster, will be done by fall 2006. The smaller 162-bed Tuck Mall building, to be built about 50 feet from the Butterfield and Russell Sage dorms, may lag slightly behind schedule until the winter of 2006, Redman estimated.


News

Students face problems with online eval. system

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Students hoping to get a head start on graduate school admissions have recently encountered problems trying to use Dartmouth Career Services' Letters of Evaluation Online system. LEO, an online credentials service that the College runs to compile letters of recommendation for students and alumni before sending them to prospective schools and employees, was out of commission from Thursday until 6 p.m.



News

Judge writes suicide note in Rauner Library

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A prominent former member of the federal judiciary penned a mass suicide note on Dartmouth's campus before killing himself, major media outlets revealed Monday. As the note itself revealed, former Baltimore Circuit Court judge Robert I.H.


Arts

Spanish cinema makes waves on American shores

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With the ever-growing population of Spanish speakers in the United States, the last 10 years in particular have seen an increase in Hispanic, and predominantly Latin, culture, from the Macarena to Ricky Martin. During this time, Spanish-language film has also seemed to grow in popularity, and to many Americans, is mistakenly viewed as a new phenomenon. Much to the contrary, Spanish film has a long, rich tradition rooted in amazing cinematography, surrealist approaches and unparalleled character development that has propelled it to the forefront of the film industry for decades. Luis Bunuel, commonly regarded as the father of surrealist film, was a contemporary of Salvador Dali and Federico Garcia Lorca and truly revolutionized cinematography.


News

Ivy leaders set up forum to rival Council's presence

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The last week has been witness to a great deal of Ivy League diplomacy, as well as some disagreement over who should provide the forums. One week after the Ancient Eight sent delegations to the Ivy Council, the schools' student government presidents and vice presidents convened this weekend at the inaugural Ivy League Student Government Meeting at Barnard College to discuss many of the same issues. Typically, the Ivy Council facilitates a separate meeting solely for the leaders of each school's student government, but this year it failed to set up such a meeting, according to Ivy Council delegate Jacques Hebert '07. In response, student government presidents and vice presidents across the Ivy League arranged their own meeting -- and set a precedent to use the Ivy League Student Government Meeting as their major forum rather than the Ivy Council. The split parallels the Dartmouth Student Assembly's move earlier this term to formally disestablish itself from Ivy Council. The students who met at Barnard said it was important for them to share ideas since they have the potential to impact their respective colleges. "It's for us who are going to be making decisions for our student governments," said Vice Chairman of the University of Pennsylvania Undergraduate Assembly Cynthia Wong. The delegates of the Ivy Council, according to Wong, have no defined role in their schools' student governments and, therefore, the Ivy Council is less likely to effect tangible benefits. The student government leaders said that they do not view their Student Government meeting as a temporary remedy to Ivy Council's failure to set up a meeting this fall. They have planned another meeting in the spring instead of planning to meet in conjunction with the Ivy Council's spring meeting as usual, leaders said. Hebert, in contrast, said that the Ivy Council's role as a facilitator of presidents' meetings should continue. "The presidents and vice presidents of different student governments should definitely use the Ivy Council as a forum," he said. This first Student Government Meeting served mainly to establish a means of communication between schools and to acquire a general idea about other schools' approaches to problems at Dartmouth, according to Assembly Vice President Todd Rabkin Golden. Among the many issues discussed in the five-hour meeting were a student bill of rights, alcohol policies, diversity training and academic advising. The delegates from each school hope to achieve a more concrete agenda at their spring meeting, but some ideas have already started to take form. The representatives, for example, discussed the advent of a student-run EMT service which students could call when a friend is in trouble with alcohol with no risk of punitive ramifications, according to Student Body President Julia Hildreth '05.


Sports

Big Green riders end fall season on top of the competition

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The Dartmouth equestrian team dominated its last show of the fall season winning by four points at the University of New Hampshire's home show on Sunday and bringing home seven first-place individual finishes. "I was thrilled with the team's performance at our last show of the Fall term," said Coach Sally Batton.


Opinion

Wake Up, Smell the Bias

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To the Editor: Jake Tapper's comments on the recent presidential campaigns were quite interesting ("Tapper '91 gives scoop on campaign reporting," The Dartmouth, November 15). However, he certainly demonstrated a surprising degree of naivete when he discussed the Swift Boat attacks on Massachusetts Sen.


Opinion

No Need for Rudeness

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To the Editor: Regarding Kelley Connolly's comments in Friday's edition of The Dartmouth ("We wanted to create an event for reducing the stigma about mental health issues on campus"): I am always amused by people who want to reduce the "stigma" of some other group, and who assert its existence in the process. Perhaps someone would like to address the "stigma" of Jews, or African Americans, or rape survivors at Dartmouth.


Sports

Returning four starters, women's hoops hyped to win

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Pundits have recently picked Dartmouth's women's basketball team to win the Ancient Eight in the Ivy League Media preseason poll. Capturing nine of the 16 first-place votes and tallying a total of 114 points, the ladies in green took the top spot in the League.


Opinion

The Real Moral Majority

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Amid a nation at war, rising healthcare costs and growing child poverty, the American electorate surprisingly cited "moral values" as the most important issue in choosing the president, trumping the economy, the war on terrorism and the war in Iraq.


News

With election over, campus pols take it easy

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With President Bush's hard-fought victory behind him, Dartmouth College Republicans President Jesse Roisin '05 now spends his days writing his thesis, catching up on sleep and, most importantly, relaxing. Roisin's situation is a common one among Dartmouth's political organizations and their officers, who are now winding down and taking a much-needed break in the aftermath of the election. During the election season both sides worked doggedly with field representatives from their respective organizations to coordinate high-visibility campus events, including voter registration drives. But with no events to organize or supporters to rally to the polls, campus political organizations have geared down for the remainder of Fall term. Neither the College Republicans nor the Young Democrats plan to hold any events during the rest of Fall term.


Opinion

Think About the Facts

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To the Editor: During the presidential campaign, there were significant efforts to discredit the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth without addressing the facts themselves.



Opinion

Drop the Losing Team

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Drop the Losing Team To the Editor: Perhaps the real mistake in the attempt to eliminate swimming was that the College picked the wrong sport. Football has become non-competitive.




Arts

'Strangers With Candy' out on DVD

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The dark comedy "Strangers with Candy," much as its title would indicate, is exactly that television show that parents wish their children would never find. The show was created by and stars the comedic troupe of Amy Sedaris, Stephen Colbert, Paul Dinello and Mitch Rouse.