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The Dartmouth
December 24, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Staff dwindles in Office of Res. Life

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Director of Housing Lynn Rosenblum's recent resignation and the upcoming maternity leave of Assistant Housing Director Rachael Class-Giguere threaten to create an understaffed Office of Residential Life this spring. Despite the departure of all but one of the housing office's full-time employees, Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman does not anticipate that ORL will face any problems due to shortages of staff. Currently, Class-Giguere is serving as Acting Director of Housing while resumes are being reviewed for a temporary replacement in that position, Redman said. By Class-Giguere's departure in late April or early May, ORL should have found a temporary Director of Housing, Redman said. ORL has also begun a national search for a candidate to permanently replace Rosenblum. Although only Redman and the temporary Housing Director will be working at ORL when students draw Fall housing, Redman says that he does not anticipate that room draw will go any less smoothly than usual as a result. "Rachael will have left before room draw happens physically," he said, "but most of the planning for room draw happens months in advance." To illustrate the point, Redman noted that he is already reviewing the pamphlet that explains room draw to students. Redman added that student employees should help the office through their "crunch period" as well.


Opinion

Vision Problems

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The disease of unrealistic chatter that plagues this college must be replaced by a call to actual action.


Arts

First DTV 'Kiss' is memorable

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With lines like "I'll give you a blitz and maybe we could get a meal or something," "Kiss and Tell," Imago Media's latest production for DTV, is an entertaining spotlight on taboo themes at the heart of Dartmouth's dating scene. The hilarious opening scene of the series premiere, which features Jay Kaplan '02 and Elenor Sigler '01 seducing one another in the Berry stacks, successfully introduces the quandary that arises throughout the episode: Is it possible to find love at Dartmouth? The show also explores how far a student has to go to find that love. In the style of the hit HBO series "Sex in the City," "Kiss and Tell" revolves around the lives of four single '03 women, who in their quest to find love at Dartmouth, must deal with the non-sensical realities of dating at the Big Green. The first episode, titled "Great Sexpectations and Good Vibrations," looks specifically at whether or not it is possible for upperclass women to date underclass men. The characters of this Dartmouth production successfully parallel those found in "Sex in the City." Maya, who is wonderfully played by Wendy Liu '02, is more or less the Carrie Bradshaw of "Kiss and Tell." Sitting at her computer, Maya drives the story line with insightful comments and personal experiences that delve into the dilemmas at hand. Alex, played by Rachel Globus '02, is the Miranda-like character.


Opinion

Waiting to Meet

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When you trip on the stairs after meeting with a professor, when you realize too late that something huge is caught in your mass of hair, and when your stomach accidentally makes a weird noise during something important, you start to pay attention to the small things. When you're stuck with three hours between classes and nothing scheduled but daydreams, when you're convinced that you're crappy at whatever it is you love to do and when you're sure that true love is meant for everyone but you, you have no other option but to think about the small things. Sometimes, it seems, everything big has gone wrong, and the future -- perhaps the biggest thing of all -- is sure to follow in that routine of mistakes.



Opinion

In Defense of Profiling

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No less than a year ago, if a shoe had come onto the market and been referred to as "the bomb," Nike executives would have claimed to have found the second coming of Air Jordans.


News

Cheating flap hits Georgia Tech

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In the latest of a series of cheating scandals to hit higher education in recent years, nearly 200 students in two introductory computer courses at the Georgia Institute of Technology have been accused of unfairly collaborating on a class project. Allegations were raised after a computer program designed to detect plagiarism discovered similarities between the students' computer code. Students found guilty will most likely be given failing grades and could also face expulsion, Georgia Tech spokesperson Bob Harty said. Using homemade software that inspects submissions for plagiarism, professors at Georgia Tech found that there were uncanny similarities in student work on a computer science class project. The 187 students facing allegations are mostly freshmen or sophomores who took either "Introduction to Computing" or "Object-Oriented Computing." Nearly 1,700 students enrolled in the two classes last class fall. "Introduction to Computing" is a mandatory course for all students while "Object Oriented Programming" is a requirement for all students enrolled in the computer science program. In both of these courses and other computer courses at Georgia Tech, one of the stipulations is that there is to be no collaboration on programming assignments, Associate Dean of Students Karen Boyd told the Associated Press. Boyd will oversee the investigation into the alleged cheating incidents. In a written statement, Georgia Tech President Wayne Clough asked for patience as the investigation proceeds and pointed out the national prevalence of cheating, noting a Duke University study that found 75 percent of college students admitted to cheating. The computer program that detected the likeness between different students' work operates by searching for details such as commas or semicolons in the same place, spacing done in the same way or the same mistakes. In the spring term of 2000, Dartmouth faced a similar cheating scandal when a visiting professor alleged 63 cases of cheating in a Computer Science 4 class. Students apparently gained access to homework solutions on a class web site that had previously been restricted, but was left unprotected after a class demonstration. At the time, visiting computer science professor Rex Dwyer told The Dartmouth that he was shocked by the incident. The number of cheating incidents in computer science during that term was greater than the number he encountered in 10 years at North Carolina State University, Dwyer claimed. After more than 30 hours of hearings and deliberation, however, the Committee on Standards decided to withdraw all charges against the students. The decision to withdraw charges was based on issues of academic integrity and fairness, Dean of the College James Larimore said at the time. Such large-scale cheating scandals and the expanding well of papers and resources available on the Internet have led to the increased popularity of computer programs designed to detect cheating. One such program is MOSS (Measure of Software Similarity), which automatically searches for similarities in C, C++, Java, Pascal, ML, Ada, or Scheme programs. Since its development in 1994, Duke University and other educational institutions have adopted MOSS as a device to detect cheating. The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Opinion

Results Matter

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Here are some media-sponsored tidbits to ponder: The 19 al-Qaida hijackers who killed 3,000 people at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and aboard United Flight 93 were evil, despicable people as well.


Sports

Casella honored, refs draw Gaudet's ire

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It is very easy to be critical. It is much more difficult to be that rare person who habitually searches for others' strengths and makes them feel good about themselves. Dan Casella '02 is one of those people. He has a broad smile and a contagious laugh, one that belies his 5-8 frame and can be heard across a room. "Everybody gets down sometimes, but in general, I am a very positive person," says Casella, who was named one of four finalists for the 2002 Hockey Humanitarian Award.




Arts

Altman's murder-mystery 'Park' has too many players

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There is something about murder mysteries and rain. There is also something about pretentious old England and dreary weather, drizzling her gaudy, grim Brits in aging pearls polished to shades of brown and gray. Director Robert Altman embraces such vintage imagery in the opening scenes and throughout his newest film, "Gosford Park," a subtly humorous menagerie of curious characters lost in a maze of endless subplots directly and indirectly linked to an unsolved murder that takes place within the chaos. Set during the 1930s in an English country mansion, the movie opens as friends of Sir William McCordle (Michael Gambon) and Lady Sylvia McCordle (Kristin Scott Thomas) arrive for a weekend shooting party.


News

COSO rethinks member selection

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The Council on Student Organizations, charged with allocating funds to many student groups, is considering structural changes in response to concerns about the selection of its members and the group's ties to other campus organizations. The membership selection process and the accountability of the organization -- which oversees a budget of $180,000 -- have been among the subjects recently discussed by COSO members, the Student Assembly and other students, according to Linda Kennedy, COSO Chair and Director of Student Activities. "There will be change," Kennedy said.


Opinion

Lost in the Ivory Tower

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To the Editor: I disagree with the assumption that sparse attendance at a panel discussion in Hanover indicates "fading interest" and "apathy" toward the war in Afghanistan (The Dartmouth, Jan.






News

Early admits are better for rich?

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(Editor's note: After a decade in which high school students across the country have increasingly turned to early decision when applying to college, national controversy has erupted over the benefits of binding November applications.


News

Alumni nominate trustees

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Three candidates are currently under consideration by Dartmouth alumni to fill a position on the Board of Trustees being vacated by Stephen Bosworth '61 as of June. The candidates, Mark Harty '73, Chansoo Joung '82 Tuck '87 and Jorge Fernandez '77, have undergone a long and rigorous selection process and are all exceptionally qualified, according to the Alumni Council. However, each has a distinctly different career, style and personal and professional history. The Raging Moderate All the candidates say they have a great dedication and love for Dartmouth, but Mark Harty '73 has held more positions as a Dartmouth alum then perhaps anyone alive. To name a few, he has served as an admissions officer, an alumni interviewer, class agent, class secretary, president of the Alumni Council from 1986"1987, chairman of the Young Alumni Awards Committee and overseer at Aquinas House. He has also been president of the Friends of Dartmouth Tennis for ten years, was instrumental in founding the College Relations Group, which interfaces the Alumni Council and the Board of Trustees, and received the Dartmouth Alumni Award, the highest award that the Alumni Council can give. In the words of Associate Director of Alumni Relations Patricia Fisher-Harris, "He's done pretty much everything you can do as a Dartmouth volunteer." Harty majored in history and graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth before graduating from Georgetown Law School in 1978. In Boston, where Harty still lives with his wife and two sons, he joined a small firm of 16 lawyers which is now has 500 lawyers in eight cities.