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The Dartmouth
December 26, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
Opinion

Patriarchal Head Games

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While I agree with Liza Williams' main point regarding the externality of binary service-based relationships as a hindrance to the overarching objective of equi-personal concomitant sexual relationships ("Sex, Solicitation and Sororities," The Dartmouth, October 26), I believe it is incumbent upon us to delve further into her conception of the nurturance of masculinist gratification rituals cast in the sorority "framework." Clearly it is not a point of anisotropic indifference that feminine "performance" from the fellatory perspective as judged by an omnipartial male "audience" (as it were) is a hampering factor toward the concomitance of relationships; indeed it has been instrumental in bringing untold numbers of otherwise flourishing partnerships to their knees. The "objective disorder" in Williams' thinking, however, is the fallacious notion that relationships constructed on a quid pro quo oral paradigm are therefore paradigmatically unsound -- or, to put it more succinctly, that they fail to pass a "global test" of paradigmatic functionality while instead perpetuating the trope of vicissitudinal subservience in the more female of the two partners.



Opinion

A Racist School

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To the Editor: While I agree that Kwame Spearman's column was really stupid, don't you think all the jokes about Columbia's location are a tad racist?


News

Youth turnout key to election, panel argues

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The upcoming presidential election will be close, important and historic, professors from Dartmouth and other colleges predicted at a panel held Monday afternoon in the Rockefeller Center. The panel's participants, Brown University political science professor James Morone, St.


News

Ramadan fasting provides students time for reflection

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The Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which requires fasting during the day, began Oct. 15 -- right in the middle of Dartmouth midterms. But many of Dartmouth's Muslim students said balancing religious observance and work hasn't proved too difficult so far, even if they sometimes feel a little weak during the day. Shamis Mohamud '08 said fasting actually helps her to work. "It is easy to balance religion along with schoolwork because my religion helps me focus my mind and work towards an academic goal," Mohamud said. Some less observant Muslim students said they fast in order to feel part of a community, but don't do it if their schoolwork will be compromised. Canmert Koral '07 said he doesn't feel too badly if he doesn't make it through the whole month of fasting. It's more of a social thing than a religious necessity," he said.


News

Police Blotter

Oct. 19, 11:28 p.m., South Main Street A 29-year-old male was taken into protective custody after creating a disturbance in the Hanover Inn lobby by yelling "What a [expletive] lovely pumpkin display!" The intoxicated male, who had previously trespassed in the Hanover Inn, was later released from the police station. Oct.


News

Wright addresses general faculty

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College President James Wright presided over the 2004 annual meeting of the general faculty yesterday, where he addressed a wide variety of issues, including expansion of the Dartmouth faculty, an upcoming report examining concerns about responsible endowment investment and a building spree that will expand the campus. Wright began his 40-minute speech saying that he believes the College is stronger today than any time in his 35-year career at Dartmouth.



Opinion

Lite on Literature

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To the Editor: Whatever the substantive merits of Dan Belkin's recent article (The Dartmouth, October 20) may be, his literary allusion could use some work.


News

Local man rescued from Conn. River

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Rescuers were worried that he would not make it in the chilly currents of the Connecticut River. But adrift and treading water after falling from his boat, all Christopher Andreasson could think of was his dog, Gabby. The 53-year-old Andreasson of Wilder, Vt., was rescued just south of the Ledyard Bridge around 6 p.m.



Opinion

I'm Transferring to Columbia

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To the Editor: In his critique that recently appeared in The Columbia Daily Spectator (Wednesday, October 20), Kwame Spearman firmly establishes Columbia's superiority over Dartmouth by exposing new information about our college. Spearman reveals that Dartmouth "[is in the] middle of a forest in New Hampshire [is in a] forest in the Northeast [has] nothing there [has students] crying in the wilderness [has a] high cow population [is a] more desolate place [than New York City] [has] nothing for [students] to do [is a] tree in the forest." Though I was shocked to learn that Dartmouth is not in New York City, I believe Spearman overestimates our intelligence by comparing our isolated College to "a scene" from "The Shining." Spearman forgets that we "got electricity last year" and, as a result, are unfamiliar with "movies." After watching "The Shining" on our new communal Hi-Fi over the weekend, however, I now understand that Dartmouth, like the isolated Overlook Hotel in Stanley Kubrick's (film director) masterpiece film, could be the setting of a cabin-fever-induced murder! In a panic after deciphering Spearman's cryptic reference, I ventured through the wilderness and found access to a new technology known as "the internet" in a nearby town so that I could uncover more scandalous information. While surfing in "cyberspace" I discovered that my "overalls and a straw hat " are not fashionable, technology may provide new methods of "cow-milking," and Green Day's hit album "Dookie," which has been in my 8-track player for the past five years, is no longer popular. Considering our cultural inferiority, there was no reason for the subtle use of "eh?" in Spearman's concluding rhetorical question (Dartmouth is "pretty lame, eh?"). Spearman should have concluded with the conviction displayed his prior assertions ("First off, I guarantee victory over Dartmouth in EVERY SPORT")! Though the "first off" phrasing was convincing, Spearman's (repeated) use of capital letters ("Columbia has a FAR more attractive student body") firmly established Columbia's superiority in my book. Thus, I am transferring. At Columbia, I hope to bask in the glory of intellectual and cultural sophistication as, according to Spearman, we will be able to "go two to three miles and end up at MTV [or] Bloomingdales." I am confident that afternoons screaming in front of the TRL window with Spearman will fade into wild nights spent writing endless newspaper articles in a sea of Twinkies.



Opinion

Make Love, Not War

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To The Editor: I must say, this whole rivalry thing seems pretty silly. We at Columbia really love you all up there, and welcome you to our neck of the woods -- or Harlem?



News

Rock the Vote slams draft at rally

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With an audience wielding anti-Bush administration signs demanding "regime change," MTV's Rock the Vote took to the lawn of Dartmouth Hall Friday afternoon, urging young people to register and vote.


Arts

'Sideways': Wine country with a full bouquet of characters

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Alexander Payne, filmmaker and self-proclaimed follower of film auteur ideal, visited the Hopkins Center Saturday night to receive the Dartmouth Film Award and to screen his latest film, "Sideways," a darker kind of romantic comedy that makes the adventures of middle-aged wine enthusiasts appealing even to late-adolescent Keystone enthusiasts. Payne's films explore subcultures, whether high school politics in "Election" or abortion activism in "Citizen Ruth." His ability to delineate well-known but rarely depicted situations is in full swing here as he takes on the humdrum existence of hotel living and briefly revisits the world of old people even more hilariously than "About Schmidt" does. The main culture portrayed in "Sideways" is that of a certain kind of Californian whose recreations include wine and divorce.




News

Green Party VP wants Bush out -- at any cost

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From the results of the 2000 election, Green Party vice presidential candidate Pat Lamarche knows that third-party candidates can have an important impact on an election's outcome. She also knows that, more than anything, she wants President Bush out of office-- even if that means putting the objectives of the Green Party on hold temporarily. Speaking to a small group of students last night, Lamarche focused on efforts to remove Bush from the White House rather than promoting herself.