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The Dartmouth
June 23, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Princeton hacks Yale admissions

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Yale University filed a complaint with the FBI yesterday, alleging that admissions officers from Princeton University hacked into a Yale admissions Web site. Applicants to Yale could use the Web site to learn whether or not they had been admitted after typing in their names, dates of birth and Social Security number. Princeton admissions officers used information from the applications of students who had applied to both schools to obtain their admissions information. Yale officials said that these actions violated the applicants' privacy. "We do believe there was a very serious violation of the privacy of the individuals," Yale General Counsel Dorothy Robinson told The Yale Daily News.



News

Dartmouth students volunteer for Senate candidates

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As the tightly-contested New Hampshire senatorial race begins to heat up, several Dartmouth students have donated their time to assist candidates in their campaigns. Phil Peisch '04 learned of the opportunity to volunteer for Governor Jeanne Shaheen, who is challenging incumbent Republican Bob Smith, while serving as president of the Young Democrats during the past year. "I'm mainly helping with the voter registration drive for Dartmouth students," said Peisch, who is working for the state gubernatorial campaign as well. While both Peisch and Josh Marcuse '04, who is also helping with the Shaheen campaign, said that they had done some local door-to-door canvassing, motivating Dartmouth students to follow the race may be their most important responsibility. "The whole election could be decided by less than 1,000 votes," Marcuse said.



News

'04s examine alcohol policy

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A working group of several '04 students are currently drafting another set of recommendations for changes to the alcohol policy. According to committee members Kevin Mazur '04 and Janos Marton '04, the current student body president, the committee especially hopes to improve the relationship between Dartmouth administrators and students and to create an alcohol policy that treats Greek organizations and other student groups more equitably. Mazur said that the committee's participants, who met for the first time Wednesday night, discussed the "state of antagonism" between students and the administration.


Opinion

The Widow Continues

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To the Editor: I should like to, at the risk of turning the paper into a sounding board for myself and Mr. Stevenson, reply to his column entitled "Coming Out of the Closet" (Wednesday, July 24). First, however, I would like to upbraid you, editorship of The Dartmouth for altering the title on my submitted work from "The Widow's Peak" to "Rhetoric and Sacrilege." Not only did you ruin my attempt, albeit in poor humor, to retain the word "widow" in my letter, but in your ultimate editorial wisdom, you allowed the "balding author" bit to remain.


News

Israeli journalist calls for peace in Mid-East

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Just two days after Israeli forces killed 15 during an airstrike in Gaza City, columnist and editorial board member for the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz Danny Rubinstein spoke out against efforts to solve the current conflict through military action. "Both sides are moving by emotions," he said to a packed crowd yesterday afternoon for a speech entitled "Is peace still possible?




Sports

Halfway there: Hockey '04s look to retake ECAC title

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In their first season under head coach Judy Oberting '91, the three members of the Dartmouth women's hockey Class of 2004 put their names in the record books as they helped the Big Green women bring home their first ever ECAC championship, then skated for the Big Green in the inaugural NCAA Women's Frozen Four. However, according to defender Lesley Reiart '04, making history was the last thing on the minds of the '04s when they arrived in Hanover. "Coming in as a freshman, you really don't know what to expect as to the caliber of hockey you are going to be playing," said Reiart, "and you're not sure what your role is going to be.




Opinion

Coming Out of the Closet

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In my piece entitled "The Widow's Challenge, Part I", I critiqued the liberal side of the Christian faith that emphasizes social justice and community service over absolute devotion to a Person.


News

Screenwriter Bernstein '40 to visit

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Accomplished television and film writer Walter Bernstein '40 will visit Dartmouth tomorrow to lecture and see a screening of his 1964 movie "Fail-Safe." Bernstein was blacklisted in the 1950s in the McCarthy-era red scare, according to Dartmouth Film Professor Joanna Rapf.


News

N.H. GOP Senate race is close

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When asked about the possible outcome of the New Hampshire Republican Senate primary, Rockefeller Center Director Linda Fowler replied, "This is a race that smart people don't make predictions about." First of all, U.S.



News

Kelley recipient of Montgomery

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For Professor Robin D.G. Kelley, scholarship is not about accolades. To him the study of the conditions and lives of the working class is about envisioning a different future. Kelley, chair of the History Department at New York University and professor of Africana Studies, returned to Dartmouth on Sunday for his second term in residence as the College's Summer term Montgomery Fellow. "Coming back to the Montgomery House is a celebration of the publication of 'Freedom Dreams,'" he said, smiling and seeming very relaxed in the now-familiar setting of the Montgomery House living room. Growing up in a poor family living in Harlem and in Southern California exposed Kelley to such issues of social justice.


News

'04s try diverse off-campus housing

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The Dartmouth class of 2004 is experimenting with off-campus housing as a convenient and sometimes cheaper alternative to College housing. "The Rock,"a house at 16 Sergeant Street, is traditionally run by Cabin and Trail, part of the Dartmouth Outing Club.


Sports

Halfway there: Baseball '04s hope to keep hits coming

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Editor's Note: This is the fifth in a series of articles profiling members of the Class of 2004 on Dartmouth varsity sports teams. In only two seasons under coach Bob Whalen, the six members of the Dartmouth Baseball Class of 2004 have helped make a full career's worth of history.


News

'04s to build Habitat house

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A network of students working through Dartmouth Habitat for Humanity will for the first time take on the primary role in providing an Upper Valley family with a new home this summer and fall, with construction tentatively scheduled to kick off this week. Though Upper Valley Habitat for Humanity will maintain a few responsibilities in the creation of the "Dartmouth House" (formerly the '04 House), including holding the mortgage, the project will be completed almost entirely through the efforts of Dartmouth students, according to Mike Bober '02, the Dartmouth Partners for Community Service Intern for Upper Valley Habitat for the Dartmouth House. While a group of 10-15 highly-committed Dartmouth Habitat members will take on additional responsibilities including administrative work and fundraising, construction of the Dartmouth House will depend on the efforts of a much larger group. Dartmouth Habitat members are not, however, worried about tracking down sufficient volunteers. "Usually, we have more interested people than spots," Bober said, noting that only a limited number of students can participate in site work each day because of the need for a skilled supervisor. Dartmouth Habitat members nonetheless hope to involve as many students as possible, regardless of their past experience. "You put in as much as you want," Student Chair Li Jun Xian '04 said, noting that many students may wish to help out for just a day or week. The organization's summer Blitzmail list, according to Bober, presently stands at around 250 students. Once it is completed, single mother Marlene DeNutte and her two children, six-year-old Deven and four-year-old Morgan, will move into the new home near Lake Mascoma in Enfield, N.H. The DeNuttes' current residence, described by Bober as "awful," contains leaking ceilings, rotted window frames, a crumbling foundation, an exposed fuse box and a dirt-floor basement that was flooded at the time of Ms. DeNutte's interview with the selection committee, among other defects. The DeNutte family was chosen from a group of between 12 and 16 families considered by a selection committee consisting of nine Upper Valley representatives and three Dartmouth students -- Bober, Jean-Paul Dedam '02 and Fawn Draucker '04. After the founding of Dartmouth Habitat for Humanity in 1996, participating students had simply supplied site work hours for Upper Valley Habitat for Humanity houses on scheduled dates. Habitat at Dartmouth took a step forward in the fall at 2000 when they for the first time collaborated with Upper Valley Habitat on a building project under conditions of "equal partnership." The idea to build an '04 house was in part motivated by Dartmouth Habitat's continued growth beyond its original function of assisting Upper Valley Habitat. "We had so many volunteers that we couldn't accommodate them," Xian said. Two members of the class of 2003, Christina LaMontagne and Jennifer Ross, created the project last summer. The Dartmouth House's intended completion date falls six to eight months in the future, but Bober warned that the process could extend longer than the usual period due to unforeseen obstacles and Dartmouth Habitat's lack of previous experience in heading up such efforts. Construction was originally slated to begin at the start of Summer term but was slowed by processes including the acquisition of permits, according to Bober. The house itself will cost upwards of $70,000, with the hiring of a site supervisor raising expenses another $10-15,000.