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The Dartmouth
December 21, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Sports

Big Red, Tigers deadlocked at top

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Princeton 10, Brown 7 Fourth-ranked Princeton extended its Ivy League consecutive win streak to 28 Saturday afternoons with a 10-7 victory over 15-ranked Brown. The game started out close, with the two teams battling to a 4-4 stalemate at halftime.




Sports

Is Sports Illustrated Right?

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Once again, the focus of the American League will be the AL East. The continuing saga of the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox will propel sports analysts around the country to ask, "Is this Boston's year?" More so than ever this is the year to wonder whether Boston can escape the dreaded Curse of the Bambino, but the Bosox will first need to slip past the most formidable team in baseball. With the acquisition of centerfielder Carl Everett from Houston, the Sox may have found the missing piece of the puzzle.


News

DarCorps will replace 'ShmenCorps service

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After a three year run as a Spring term community service day, the DarCorps program will be moved to replace the 'ShmenCorps service day during freshman orientation this fall. DarCorps -- which stands for Dartmouth Community OutReach ProjectS -- began in 1997 and has traditionally involved several hundred students in a wide variety of volunteer projects throughout the Upper Valley.




Sports

Baseball tames the Lions twice

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Dartmouth baseball, behind the run production of leaders Brian Nickerson '00 and James Little '00, wasted no time gaining five runs in the first inning off Columbia right hander Ryan Kiernan.


News

Students bring varied educational backgrounds

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As the 2000 Presidential race heats up, both Al Gore and George W. Bush have started to make the reform of primary and secondary American education a major campaign issue. One of the central issues is the use of vouchers, which allow parents to direct the money the government would have paid for their child's education at a public school to the school of their choice -- be it public, private or parochial. But what are the real differences between the kinds of education that schools offer students?





News

Journalists discuss future of publications, media, Internet

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Prominent journalists discussed the nature of media at the start of the millennium during the 2000 Senior Symposium panel "Media Revolutions: A Reflection on Society" on Saturday. Journalists Chris Wren '57, a reporter and editor for The New York Times; Matt Storin, Editor of the Boston Globe; and New York Times National Education Correspondent Jacques Steinberg '88, discussed how recent changes in technology -- especially the Internet -- and culture have affected the news industry. Steinberg said that many people no longer require newspapers for much of their information, since primary sources could now be found online.



Opinion

The Campus SLI Response

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This weekend, the Trustees will be making the final decisions on the SLI. After 14 months of committees, discussions, task forces, and rallies, it comes down to this weekend. The Trustees have a lot of reading material.


Opinion

The Battle Over Elian

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It's amazing how the case of Elian Gonzalez, who was found floating in an inner tube off the coast of Florida just prior to Thanksgiving, has sparked both international and domestic controversy.



Opinion

Political Creativity

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The saying in Hollywood is that "you're only as good as your last movie." In Washington, the saying should be "you're only as good as your last earmark." Earmarking refers to a practice that is common among many in elected office, of adding last-minute provisions to spending bills, provisions that are specifically targeted for a new program or service within their district or state.