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The Dartmouth
December 20, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Opinion

Table For One, Please

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Everyone's said it at one time or another: "I wish I had some time ALONE!" During the week before the start of Spring term I was traveling through Austria solo, in search of this elusive state of contented solitude we all seem to chase and cherish.



News

'Year 2000 problem' is not a problem at College

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While universities and corporations worldwide are scurrying to avoid massive computer system failures in the year 2000, College computer administrators say Dartmouth is well-prepared for the coming millennium. The "year 2000 problem" that many systems operators are struggling to correct arises from a small programming defect in a computer's capacity to handle dates. If the computer reads the year as two digits, the advent of the millennium will cause failures because "00" is not greater than "99." This illogical progression, as computers see it, from "99" to "00" is expected to cause systems to behave unpredictably, in some cases, shut down altogether. The College, for the most part, expects to avoid the year 2000 problem, according to Director of Administrative Computing Bill Barry. Barry said the College is taking two steps to ensure its computers avoid problems at the turn of the century -- regularly buying new systems which have been programmed to deal with the century change and implementing "in-house developed software," programmed by the College to fit its special needs. But there are still some older systems on campus which could be affected by the coming of the new millennium. For example, the D1 system, Dartmouth's original time-share system, was set up in the late 1960s and could be affected if it is not phased out. Though there were plans to shut down this system several years ago, there are still some programs run on the system, Barry said.




News

Locals argue against bike-path proposal

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Approximately 40 Hanover residents, many of them visibly angry, argued against a proposed new bicycle path at a meeting in the Hanover Town Office last night. The path would run from the Mink Brook area in Hanover up to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. The Hanover town board proposed the bicycle path in late March as a more environmentally sound route to DHMC because residents would be riding bicycles instead of driving cars. However, many town residents made it clear last night that they did not agree.


News

Senior symposium asks 'what is culture?'

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This year's senior symposium will attempt to answer the question "What is American Culture?" through a variety of panels and presentations beginning on Wednesday. Matt Shafer '97, senior class vice president, said the symposium planning committee sought a topic that would attract different student groups.


Sports

Baseball team opens Ivy season with three wins

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With Major League Baseball holding its opening day this past week, it is only fitting that Dartmouth should kick off its Ivy League season as well this weekend with twin bills at Penn and Columbia. After getting off to a rough start in Saturday's first game against Penn, a 6-1 loss, the Big Green bounced back in impressive fashion to sweep the remainder of their weekend schedule. In the second game against Penn they held on for victory in a tight 4-3 game, and on Sunday the Big Green took both contests against the Lions, 10-7 and 11-7, respectively.




Arts

Smith performance impresses students

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On Friday night, on the twenty-fifth anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, Anna Deavere Smith combined her talents as an educator, actress, playwright, and journalist in a dramatic performance in Spaulding auditorium titled "Snapshots: Glimpses of America in Change." Her brilliant lecture was centered around race relations in the United States -- the social and economic issues that surround racial and ethnic conflict in our country. Noreen Nilan '99 commented that she "thought Smith was a dynamic, powerful performer.


Sports

Women's lax splits on Pennsylvania roadtrip

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It's often been said that in life, you win some and you lose some. Well, in just one weekend, the women's lacrosse team won one and lost one. On Friday, the Big Green beat the 12th-ranked Penn Quakers on their home turf, 16-6, but later fell in the second frame of battle against the Nittany Lions of Penn State by a score of 12-9. The Sunday loss in State College, PA is the lone blemish on the Big Green's near-perfect 5-1 overall record on the season.





News

Montes-Irueste, Kawakyu declare: Two new candidates enter Assembly race as informal ticket

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Unai Montes-Irueste '98 and Nahoko Kawakyu '99 made the Student Assembly election campaign a bit more interesting over the weekend by announcing their candidacies for president and vice president, respectively. Montes-Irueste and Kawakyu are running on an informal ticket, though a victory by one does not necessarily guarantee the election of the other -- since the president and vice president are elected separately. Montes-Irueste joins Frode Eilertsen '99 and Scott Jacobs '99 in the field for president and Kawakyu becomes the second official vice-presidential candidate, joining Dave Altman '99. Eilertsen, Jacobs and Altman are on the official Assembly ballot, while the two new entrants will have to gain all their votes as write-ins. Montes-Irueste said junior Ben Hill's withdrawal from the presidential campaign late last week created a political void which prompted him to enter the race. Hill quit the race last Thursday -- citing a desire to have more personal time during his senior year -- and endorsed Eilertsen. In the brief period between Hill's dropping out of the race and Montes-Irueste's entering, there were no members of next year's senior class running for Assembly president. "For argument's sake," it is necessary to have a candidate from the '98 class in the election, Montes-Irueste said. Eilertsen, for one, agreed with Montes-Irueste that the race needed another member of the Class of 1998. "It would just be too sad if no '98 was running," Eilertsen said.