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The Dartmouth
December 25, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Opinion

Eating Right

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Take a moment to travel back in time with me, to a time when fad diets, weight-loss drugs and gastric bypass surgery were the headlines.


Opinion

Assaulting Common Sense

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Weapons of mass destruction don't kill people. People kill people. Individuals are the ones that decide to use weapons of mass destruction and kill people.


Arts

'Wimbledon' serves and faults

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First Preview: 6:40 p.m. First Watch Glance: 7:25 p.m. Director Richard Loncraine attempts to win a Grand Slam with his aptly titled film, "Wimbledon." Unfortunately, what he serves up is more of a double fault.






News

Alcohol cases clog discipline system

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It might not come as much of a surprise to students, but a significant majority of those who tangle with Dartmouth's disciplinary system do so because of alcohol, official College reports indicate. For the third straight year, roughly 60 percent of the cases entering the disciplinary system this past academic year resulted in students being found responsible for either public intoxication or underage possession of alcohol, according to the latest Office of Undergraduate Judicial Affairs report. In all, 261 students were found responsible for public intoxication and 85 received violations for underage possession of alcohol, according to the report. This represented 68 percent of sanctions, down slightly from last year. In a particularly serious incident involving drinking this past year, one intoxicated student started a fire in a residence hall stairwell and then ran away, in the end getting expelled from the College. "The sanction reflects the seriousness and danger of the student's behavior, inconsistencies between the student's account and the physical evidence and the fact that the student ran away from the fire without pulling an alarm," the report concluded. The incident, described in the report as "not typical," was one of 588 disciplinary cases handled by the College during the 2003-04 academic year. Four students were suspended for driving under the influence, and also faced local court cases, while 17 students were disciplined for possessing drugs or drug paraphernalia. The report also recorded five serious cases of students becoming "extremely belligerent and uncooperative" with Safety and Security and Dick's House personnel, leading to two suspensions and some court charges. In one case of alleged sexual abuse, a male student was suspended for six terms. In another incident, two students having relationship problems were placed on College Discipline and "directed to have no further contact with each other," and one of the students was later suspended for violating that order. "Though students may hope to keep their relationship issues private, there can be disciplinary ramifications when problems in a relationship lead to either noise complaints or other situations that bring the matter to the College's attention," the report noted. Most other College discipline cases involved the Academic Honor Principle. Seventeen of 18 students found responsible for violations received some type of suspension.



News

Alum heads rapid response for Bush

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As soon as Thursday night's debate between President Bush and Mass. Sen. John Kerry concluded, Matt McDonald '00 sprang into action. Wanting to make sure the Bush-Cheney campaign's account of events was included in the press coverage of the debate, McDonald and his team of colleagues spent the debate and the moments following it identifying what they perceived as Kerry's most serious missteps, and then figuring out how to relay them to the press. As director of the campaign's Rapid Response team, McDonald manages press coverage of the Bush-Cheney campaign on an hour-to-hour basis, responding to attacks and publicizing inconsistencies made throughout the day. Among the most damaging of Kerry's mistakes, McDonald said in an interview with The Dartmouth, were the senator's contradictory remarks regarding the Iraq war. "He said in one breath that the war was a 'mistake,' but asserted in the next that our troops are not dying for a mistake," McDonald said, adding, "Kerry added insult to injury by calling our allies a coalition that wasn't 'genuine.'" McDonald then spent much of the rest of the night publicizing such talking points throughout all available media outlets. "In the context of these debate statements, we called attention to them in the press, made sure that people were talking about it on television and launched an ad on his 'global test' doctrine." McDonald said. McDonald's team places a premium on speed -- and with good reason. Before the early 1990s, campaigns had as much as a full day to respond to attacks and publicize their viewpoint before a newspaper was printed or a nightly newscast aired. However, with the advent of the 24-hour news channels in the last decade, the concept of rapid response has become important. "The news cycle today is in constant motion ... there are cable news channels which cover events all day," McDonald said. McDonald's knowledge of the media comes from experience, although his road to the Bush campaign was an atypical one.


News

Police Blotter

Sept. 29, Lebanon Street, 12:54 a.m. Jason Leopold, a 21-year-old resident of Lebanon, was arrested on a warrant from a traffic accident that occurred in August Street.



Opinion

Dan Gets Duped

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It has become obvious that Dan Rather and his cabal at CBS News were participants in one of the greatest journalistic dupes in recent years.


News

Kerry, Fox speak on stem cell research

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PORTSMOUTH, N.H. -- Presidential candidate Sen. John Kerry energized supporters at a rally held at Pease International Tradeport in Portsmouth Sunday night, with chants of "'Kerry!


Sports

Dartmouth and Princeton get defensive in 0-0 draw

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The Dartmouth men's soccer squad (2-1-4 overall, 0-0-1 Ivy) battled the Princeton Tigers (4-2-2 overall, 0-0-1 Ivy) to a scoreless draw, in a contact-filled, defense-dominated double overtime thriller at Lourie-Love Field in New Jersey Saturday. After a season-opening loss to Cal State-Northridge, the Big Green has now extended its undefeated streak to six games. Saturday's game was marked by a rash of fouls -- Dartmouth registered 21 to Princeton's 25 -- and physical play in the game's most pivotal moments, most notably a 70th-minute tangle-up involving Princeton junior midfielder Ben Young and Dartmouth defender Oliver Harker-Smith '05. As Young surged toward the Dartmouth penalty box on a through ball, he was tripped by Smith, which resulted in a Big Green yellow card. Controversy arose when the referee determined the spot of the foul to be outside of the box.


Sports

Schechtman leads tennis to two wins

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Trading in the fall foliage of Hanover, N.H. for the bright lights of New York City, Dartmouth men's tennis traveled to the National Tennis Center this weekend for the ECAC Tournament. Though the Big Green would ultimately leave Flushing Meadows with two wins in three matches, tournament play opened up with a little bit of heartbreak.


News

ZBT attempts to penetrate Hanover's fraternity scene

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Astute readers may have noticed an atypical advertisement in the classified section of The Dartmouth at the beginning of the term: brothers wanted. Zeta Beta Tau, a historically Jewish fraternity, is offering male students the opportunity to start a chapter at Dartmouth, but as members of other campus Greek-affinity organizations can attest, the path from vision to reality can be a struggle. Dartmouth is one of about 75 schools where ZBT is advertising, based on criteria such as the quality of the Greek system and the Jewish population at the school, ZBT executive director John Yulish said.



News

Super-lock not invincible, after all

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Kryptonite is supposed to be invincible -- at least in the comic-book world of Superman. But it turns out a few twists of a ballpoint pen can be enough to render it impotent. Videos posted recently on the Internet showed how the barrel of a standard ballpoint pen can be used to unlock certain models of bike locks made by Kryptonite, suggesting to many on campus that even bikes secured by nation's leading bike lock company may not be as safe as they once seemed. The news sent shockwaves through the cycling community, which was stunned that a cheap pen could pick a lock priced at $90.