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The Dartmouth
December 22, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Students will celebrate gay pride

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This weekend the Dartmouth Rainbow Alliance will hold its first Dartmouth Pride Weekend for gay, lesbian and bisexual students and their allies and will display pride in their sexual orientation through participation in several organized events. DRA advisor Bart Bingenheimer '94 said the DRA hopes to make Pride Weekend an annual event. He said the purpose of Dartmouth Pride Weekend is to "socialize, have fun and generate some visibility." But the DRA's efforts to generate visibility were partially thwarted Wednesday when a rainbow flag the group had put up that day in Food Court to celebrate Dartmouth Gay Pride Weekend was removed later that night, DRA member Stephen Borboroglu '97 said. He said a student complained Wednesday night about the removal to Safety and Security.



Opinion

Welander Portrays Assembly Inaccurately

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To the Editor: I am responding to Matt Welander '97's column titled "The True Identity of the SA" [The Dartmouth, April 24]. Mr Welander: and I use the term loosely, I am indeed touched by the amount of thought and time you invested in utterly failing to grasp the point of my original article.


Opinion

SAGE's Role on Campus

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Last week Jeffrey Botelho '96 wrote a very enlightening column ["Addressing Sexual Assault," The Dartmouth, April 25]. Botelho wrote, "I think group education to combat against this type of behavior is in order, requiring the full attendance of fraternity members, not just the new members ... with the cooperation of rape educators and survivors, the administration, and fraternity members, I think we can start fighting a winning battle against sexual assault." Sexual Awareness through Greek Education (SAGE) believes that his column has captured the essence of how sexual assault and the Greek system should be addressed at Dartmouth. SAGE is an organization made up of active members of Dartmouth's Greek system.



News

Panel debates affirmative action

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Experts in law and public policy discussed the role of affirmative action in American society in a panel discussion yesterday in 3 Rockefeller before nearly 80 people. The discussion, titled "Is there a Need for Affirmative Action in Public Policy Today?" was moderated by English lecturer Stephanie Boone.


Sports

Softball team snaps six-game losing streak

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Despite being trampled in doubleheaders against the University of Pennsylvania Saturday and Cornell Sunday, the Dartmouth softball team snapped a six-game losing streak yesterday with a 4-3 victory over Vermont in the first game of a doubleheader. The Big Green is now 6-28 overall and 0-10 against the Ancient Eight. A come-from-behind victory in the first game yesterday gave a 4-3 win over Vermont. Vermont, however, came back to strike the Big Green down 8-0 in the afternoon's second game. In the first game, the Big Green fell behind the Catamounts 3-1 until the bottom of the seventh inning when Dartmouth came from behind to tie the game and force extra innings. Both Bridget Finn '99 and Julia Doster '97 were brought home at that time by Bess Tortolani '98 and Lauren McQuade '97, respectively, to tie the game. In the bottom of the eighth inning, Captain Karen Hersey '96 scored when Doster lined a double to right field giving the Big Green the victory. Despite such a stunning turnaround in the first game, the second game proved to be a disappointment for Dartmouth. The Catamounts shut out Dartmouth 8-0 in the second game as Vermont pounded out 11 hits and scored eight runs whereas the Big Green barely mustered two hits. The Vermont game was a definite turnaround for Dartmouth compared to its games over last weekend. "It was a tough weekend because we expected to win all four games," Hersey said. The Pennsylvania Quakers surely made the Big Green tremble with their 4-3 and 9-3 wins over Dartmouth. The Big Green leapt out with an early 2-0 lead in the second inning but Penn quickly tied the game 2-2 in the third. Two single runs, one in the fifth and one in the sixth innings boosted the Quaker lead to 4-2. Despite another Dartmouth run in the seventh inning, the Big Green was unable to close the gap enough for a win. "The first game against Pennsylvania was a good game," pitcher Erin Rath '98 said.


Sports

Chatis '98 lifts her way to worlds

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The broad and varied interests of Dartmouth students span all spectrums. However, Corey Chatis '98 competes in a sport that, to her knowledge, has no Big Green participants other than herself -- powerlifting. Chatis competes in the American Drug-Free Powerlifting Association, one of the sports many governing bodies.


Sports

Men's lax blasts UNH 20-12

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Although yesterday's men's lacrosse game between Dartmouth and UNH unequivocally settled the question of who is the best lacrosse team in the state, the question of who is New Hampshire's premiere attackman should still be chalked up as an unsolved mystery. The Big Green easily handled the Wildcats 20-12, led by hulking attackmen Tom Scott '96 and Scott Hapgood '97.


News

Restored Bentley statue to return

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Students suffering through midterms this week and needing a little luck will be happy to hear today's good news. The Warner Bentley statue will be put back today, about one month after it was vandalized in an apparent April Fool's Day prank, said Adrienne Hand, public relations coordinator for the Hood Museum of Art. Timothy Rub, director of the Hood Museum of Art, told The Dartmouth last month that "Someone put tarnish remover or some kind of metal remover over the greater portion of the [bust's] head." Originally it would have cost upwards of $1,500 to restore the statue, Rub said. Instead, Kellen Haak '79, Hood Museum of Art registrar, took it upon himself to restore the bust. Conserving the statue was "a labor of love, having rubbed Warner's nose on more than one occasion as an undergraduate," Haak said. Hand said Haak "oversees the care, restoration and shipment of all the works of art owned by the College.


News

Navarro talks on Conference on Women

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History Professor Marysa Navarro described to an audience of about 75 people yesterday afternoon the issues addressed at the "largest women's meeting in the history of the planet." Navarro's speech, titled "Feminism and the U.N.



Opinion

The Roots of Faulty Reasoning

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There are two common mistakes that we Dartmouth pundits make in our various arguments. These two elements are so pervasive in the bad reasoning that goes on at this place that someone really must do something. First of all, if I hear one more argument that starts with the following phrase I am going to scream in violent pain: "Well we are all smart enough to get into Dartmouth, so ..." This goes wrong in a bunch of directions, including the fact that among Dartmouth students, intelligence is not universal.


Arts

Play uses dance, music to communicate message

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An Irishman, bathed in a pool of white light, begins to recount a story from his childhood. The story takes place when he was quite young, yet he remembers every last detail in "Dancing at Lughnasa," this term's mainstage play, which opened on Tuesday night. This man is Michael Mundy (J.


News

Williams finds 'hope' in people touched by nature

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Terry Tempest Williams, a noted naturalist, spoke about the influence of nature in everyone's life, in front of a packed crowd in 105 Dartmouth Hall last night. Williams' speech, titled "The Unspoken Hunger," explored the interaction between her personal life and nature. Much of the speech consisted of Williams reading from her books "Desert Quartet" and "An Unspoken Hunger," and her latest book, "Family Construction." Williams, naturalist-in-residence at the Utah Museum of Natural History, began by speaking about the past two days she has spent at Dartmouth.


Arts

Pharcyde displays hip-hop routine

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The hip-hop act The Pharcyde, in their performance at Webster Hall last night, faced the daunting task of communicating their message of hip-hop to a crowd that did not seem very familiar with their style. But that only made them more determined to win over the J.


News

Wilma Mankiller undergoing chemo

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Wilma Mankiller, Winter term's Montgomery Fellow who was diagnosed with lymphoma cancer at the end of last term, is currently undergoing chemotherapy and said yesterday it is her optimism that keeps her strong. Lymphoma is a type of cancer that develops in the lymphatic system, which is part of the immune system, according to the Cancer Information Service of New England. Mankiller, the former principal chief of the Cherokee Nation, said she has had two "pretty aggressive chemotherapy treatments" so far, and in the next few weeks the doctors will know how many more she needs. She said after her first chemotherapy treatment in March, her doctors felt the tumor had shrunk some. "Chemotherapy is no cake walk," Mankiller said.


Arts

Gilliam's 'Brazil' contemplates profundity

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Terry Gilliam has always worked with the past. In directing for Monty Python and in his first two independent releases "Jabberwocky" and "Time Bandits," Gilliam took us back to the medieval era, when knights battled evil beasts and rode in search of Holy Grails. Through the Python film "The Meaning of Life," Gilliam was able to make a transition into relative modernity, though certainly not normality.


News

'99s take steps to form new sorority

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The 21 members of the Class of 1999 who have signed up to found a new sorority held their first meeting last night, but declined to release any decisions. The prospective members of the new sorority cannot request College recognition until the next academic year, since the College prevents freshmen from joining Greek organizations. "Nothing's going to be official until the fall," Panhellenic Council President Jess Russo '97 said.


Sports

Vogler '96 takes 1st at Northeasts

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Sara Vogler '96 closed out her competitive collegiate golf career in style last Sunday with a win at the Northeast Women's Intercollegiate Championship. With the win Vogler became the third Dartmouth golfer in the 15 year history of the event to take top honors.