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The Dartmouth
December 24, 2025 | Latest Issue
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News

IFC will address 'mutual distrust'

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The newly elected Inter-Fraternity Council will work for the next year to maintain a united Dartmouth Greek system in order to improve public relations with the administration and community, according to IFC President Sunil Bhagavath '03 and Vice President John Lawrence '03. Bhagavath, Lawrence and the other members of the IFC -- a representative body for all fraternities on campus -- began their terms of office on Tuesday. Bhagavath, who has served in the past as Social Chair and Summer President of Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity, said that the IFC, in conjunction with the Greek Leaders Council and the Greek community as a whole, must work to overcome a "feeling of mutual distrust between the administration and houses." Lawrence, a brother of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, said that "the Greek system stands at a really tricky -- and I would say vital -- point in its existence." "The Greek system does a lot of things that a lot of people don't know about," such as community service projects and "a very real commitment in many houses to academic excellence," he said. "The attitude toward the Greek system has suffered due to the Student Life Initiative and events at certain houses." He referred to the revelation at the now derecognized Zeta Psi fraternity last spring of the "sex papers," a weekly newsletter which promised "patented date rape techniques" and named female Dartmouth students in association with the alleged sexual exploits of individual brothers. "The Greek system has come under a lot of fire and has largely gone unappreciated by a decent segment of the population," he said. He added, "there are some people that will tell you that the system is exclusive, and I think that that needs to be addressed." In terms of communication between Greek houses and the administration, Bhagavath said that the IFC "needs to address a lack of dialogue between the Greek system and the administration." He attributed controversy over the summer about the implementation of walkthroughs by Safety and Security to a breakdown in communication. "Some of the guys that were here last summer were a little bitter and distrustful of the administration.


News

Thin ice keeps Occom closed; Polar Bears unfettered

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Balmy weather and snow has kept skaters off Occom Pond for all but three days this season, but there may be relief in site for winter sports enthusiasts. While Grounds Manager Robert Thebodo hopes to open the pond as soon as possible, an "overwhelming concern for safety" is the reason why the pond remains closed. A cold spell this weekend may help -- daytime temperatures below 20 degrees are best for maintaining the skating surface -- but warm and rainy weather in the meantime is likely to hinder pond maintenance. A lack of sufficient ice and the need to use equipment elsewhere around campus to clear paths after heavy snowfalls have delayed the opening of the pond. The pond traditionally opens for skating between Christmas week and mid-January, although the pond has been open as early as Thanksgiving in previous years. Although crews have begun working to prepare the pond, "we did not have enough ice recently to put small equipment out there," Thebodo said. "In the last few days, we've taken measures to flood the pond so the snow wouldn't be as much of a problem, and we swept and blew snow off," he said. The equipment used to clear the pond has frequently been needed this term for snow removal in other areas around campus, such as highly trafficked sidewalks. Occom Pond is maintained by L&M Service Contractors, an outside contractor. Thebodo uses the American Pulpwood Association's scale to determine safe ice thickness.




Opinion

In Defense of Civil Liberty

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The editorial "In Defense of Profiling," by Sam Stein (The Dartmouth, Jan. 22) is a clear indication that the United States still has notions of who is an American and who is not.


Opinion

An American Abroad

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Immediately following Sept. 11, like so many others, I was filled with a kind of patriotic urge. I wanted to hang an American flag outside the house, but my dad said he still felt uneasy with such displays after the hollow patriotism of the Vietnam era.




News

Former CIA officer criticizes agency

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The Central Intelligence Agency has been in a state of decline for decades and needs reform, former CIA Middle East specialist Reuel Marc Gerecht said yesterday. In a speech severely criticizing his former employer, Gerecht -- who worked with the CIA's clandestine Directorate of Operations for nine years -- said many problems stem from the agency's inability to recognize problems and change accordingly. "Sept.



News

Marcuse, SA attempt to save Ivy Council

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The unexpected promotion of Student Assembly member Joshua Marcuse '04 to the presidency of the Ivy Council set the tone for last night's meeting of the Assembly as Dartmouth's student leaders looked to save the all-Ivy forum. Marcuse, formerly the Council's vice president of internal affairs, assumed the office following the resignation of Cornell's Michael Brown.


Arts

Williamson uses familiar formula for new WB drama

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To be honest, I was a little uneasy about the whole concept of "Glory Days" in the first place. Not only has it replaced "Jack and Jill," my personal favorite of 2001 (though apparently I was the only one who appreciated it due to the fact that it was cancelled), it has temporarily stolen "Felicity's" time slot. Knowing that the show was created by Kevin Williamson ("Dawson's Creek"and "Scream") and stars the aesthetically appealing Eddie Cahill, I decided to give it a chance.





News

Police get no leads in swastika case

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Over a week after a Smith Hall resident discovered a swastika sketched on her door's message board, investigators have uncovered no new leads in the case. "It's still an open file with us," Hanover Police Chief Nick Giaccone said. The message board in question was not confiscated by police as evidence because, according to Giaccone, "The officer felt it was not necessary." If a suspect is eventually arrested, a likely charge would be criminal mischief, a class A misdemeanor which carries a fine of up to $2000. In the 1999 incident in which Peter Cataldo wrote "Kill Kosher Kikes" and other anti-Semitic message on a fellow student's marker board, the underlying charge investigators considered was a criminal threat. The charge Cataldo could have faced carries the same penalty as criminal mischief.


News

'34 dies, misses seeing family's 3rd Olympian

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Jack Shea '34 was fond of ice skating on Occom Pond while at Dartmouth, though it is unlikely his friends could have kept up with him. Shea -- who won two gold medals in speedskating at the 1932 Lake Placid Winter Olympics -- was also known as a father and grandfather to Olympic competitors. His son, Jim, competed in the 1964 Innsbruck Games, while grandson Jim Jr.




News

Evers-Williams gives MLK keynote

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"I'm not a pessimist, but I'm a realist. And as we know, freedom is not free." Myrlie Evers-Williams, the first woman chair of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, reflected yesterday on the state of social justice and equality in the United States, especially following Sept.