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

Motions lead members to quit Assembly meeting

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Some Student Assembly members left last night's meeting slamming doors behind them after it ended with votes to table both an attendance resolution that removed truant assembly members, and a set of resolutions on community at Dartmouth. "We were discussing a motion supposedly to increase responsibility and effectiveness of the Assembly," Assembly member Scott Jacobs '99 said after the meeting.


News

Founder forged unique path

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Brian Rosborough, founder of the environmental watchdog organization Earthwatch, never much liked investment banking. In an interview prior to last night's speech, Rosborough said he was "not very interested in the pursuit of assets." "It was more fun to give money away than to make it," he said with a chuckle. He said what interested him more was the opportunity to be of service to others, and since then he has devoted himself to this pursuit. Earthwatch offers its members opportunity to work with scientists studying life on earth in a program called EarthCorps, Rosborough said. "I started the organization when I recognized that problems were best solved by people who were willing to work with them," he said. Members, ranging in age from 15 to 85 years, volunteer their time and funds to the projects, he said. Since the organization started in 1972, it has funded more than 2,000 community service expeditions, Rosborough said.



Opinion

On Segregated Housing

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Once again, the radical and anti-intellectual movement here at the College has reared its ugly head in the form of a new faction of the Dartmouth Rainbow Alliance that ironically labels itself with a self-demeaning title, the "Political Queers." This group's agenda is not only in direct contradiction with their most fundamental goals of integrating the Dartmouth Community and promoting campus-wide tolerance of the gay/lesbian community, but their proposal to obtain affinity housing for gay/lesbian students is both socially and intellectually destructive to the well being of our campus. The beauty of Dartmouth's current housing policy is that from the start, an attempt is made to integrate first-year students with as diverse a group of upper-class students as possible.


News

Student board protests Collis proposals

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The student-run Collis Governing Board criticized Dartmouth Dining Service's plan to change the menu at Collis Cafe in a letter last week to Director of Dining Services Pete Napolitano. Last term, Napolitano suggested changing the menu at Collis to reflect the dining area's reputation as a meeting and gathering place and to make up for losses in sales. Napolitano told The Dartmouth last term that suggested changes included an expansion of the bakery program and the gourmet coffee line and the addition of fresh squeezed juices. After conducting a student survey over BlitzMail last term, the Collis governing board, an eight-member student board created to represent the interests of those who use Collis as a student center, released a letter criticizing the suggestions. "Based on the student survey conducted last term, the Collis Governing Board strongly recommends that Dartmouth Dining Services reconsider any planned changes to the Collis Cafe," the letter states. Chris Swift '98, a member of the governing board, said the letter was composed primarily because Napolitano had "not made any changes to his plans or started a dialogue with the students." The board wanted Napolitano to hear students' voices, said Ruth Morgan '96, a board member. DDS sponsored several "round table" discussions during Winter term, in order to give students a chance to voice their opinions about proposed changes in campus dining. "Even though they've had the 'round table' discussions and have met with the Student Assembly, we didn't want a change to be made without the students," Morgan said. Although Napolitano acknowledged that the decision to change the cafe stems from financial considerations, he said he is very interested in what students want. "The Collis menu that currently exists has been in existence for over a decade," he said.



News

Faculty talk addresses rush process

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In the first of a series of faculty talks, Dean of Residential Life Mary Turco led a discussion last night at Epsilon Kappa Theta sorority along with Religion Professor Amy Hollywood about exclusion in the sorority rush process. About 25 women attended the discussion, which was sponsored by the Panhellenic Council, the governing body of the College's six sororities. Turco said she has had many women approach her "in devastation," because they felt "social exclusion by a group they so much wanted to be a part of," when they were not extended a bid by the house they had hoped to join. She said other than victims of assault or students who had suffered family tragedies, some of the most upset students she has dealt with have been women who had just gone through the sorority rush process. "The ethical dilemma of the sorority system is its tremendous exclusivity because of its size," Turco said.



Sports

Men's tennis sweeps Monmouth

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The chilly weekend weather had no effect on the play of the Big Green men's tennis team this weekend as they streaked past Monmouth 7-0. Dartmouth began the swarm in doubles action by sweeping all three matches.


News

Veto '93 to leave College to pursue masters degree

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After spending six years at the College, four as a student and two as an administrator, Liza Veto says she is ready to move on. Veto, the coordinator of the Sexual Abuse Awareness Program, and a member of the class of 1993 will be leaving the College in July to pursue a masters in social work.


Opinion

Dartmouth In Pieces

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Have you ever noticed that all words are defined by other words? There is not a single word in any language whose meaning can be expressed without the deployment of other words that are subject to the very same linguistic limitation.



Sports

Women's laxers drop weekend game 9-5

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The women's lacrosse team notched an important 10-7 Ivy League victory over the University of Pennsylvania Saturday. The team, however, was unable to rally from a slow start yesterday against third-ranked Penn State and fell to the Nittany Lions 9-5 on a cold, snowy afternoon in Hanover. The important victory over Penn gave the Big Green their first win in Ivy League play, raising their record to 1-1.


Sports

Men's crew falls to Yale

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The men's heavyweight crew team started its spring season on a sour note this past weekend. The team traveled to Connecticut where it was swept in all five races by Ivy League opponent Yale last Saturday. The first varsity boat finished well behind Yale's first boat's 5:41.2 pace, coming in at 5:48.0. Dartmouth's most successful effort came from the second varsity boat.




News

Launius kicks off senior symposium

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NASA Chief Historian Roger Launius kicked off this year's Senior Symposium last night by telling about 80 people in Collis Common Ground that almost nothing is impossible. Someday, we may ourselves journey to the moon, he said. Launius's remarks were part of the opening ceremony for the Class of 1996 Senior Symposium, titled "They Said It Couldn't Be Done." The symposium will feature eight more speakers who have demonstrated persistence "through criticism and doubt, disturbing the equilibrium and ultimately contributing to the common good," according to the Senior Symposium Committee. "This year's symposium is an intellectual gift to the College from this year's senior class," remarked Leslie Jennings '96, a member of the symposium committee, prior to the opening remarks. If something can be conceived in our society, it can be done, Launius said last night. "When someone of importance says that something couldn't be done, it almost inevitably will be," Launius said. "Perhaps what we're doing today is paving the way for a future Columbus to set sail," he said. Because predictions about future advances have so frequently been wrong, skepticism is not always appropriate, Launius said. "It's probably not a great idea to make a lot of sweeping anecdotes about what the future will hold," he said. For example, he said, people who doubted the possibility of space travel, mass communication and the computer have all been proven wrong. Perhaps no scientific advancement was more doubted than the possibility of traveling to the moon. Science Digest printed in 1948 that "landing and moving around the moon offers so many serious problems for human beings that it may take science another 200 years to lick them," Launius said. Fifty percent of Americans in 1949 believed nothing would ever be sent to space during their lifetimes, he said. Launius said attitudes toward space travel began to change only a few years later. "In the 20th century people began to realize that we did have the potential to fly beyond the Earth's atmosphere," he said. "The rocket technology was coupled with a public relations campaign to convince individuals that it could be done," Launius said. Changes in missile technology, namely the creation of the "V2" missile in Nazi Germany, showed the public rocket travel might be possible. "Because of the V2's success, people began to talk about the capabilities inherent in this type of technology," Launius said. Launius said Wernher von Braun, the German engineer who defected to the United States after World War II, was instrumental in changing American perception of space flight. In 1952, von Braun "articulated a broad-based sweeping plan of space exploration," Launius said. A "wheel-space-station" that appeared in Collier's Magazine in the late 1950s catapulted von Braun into the spotlight, where he was a vocal advocate of space travel. Launius said space travel became a household concern for Americans in the 1960s.


News

Biology professor Langford to appear in PBS program

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Biology Professor George Langford will appear in a Public Broadcasting Station program about minority scientists, titled "BreakThrough: The Changing Face of Science In America." The three-part program will air today and on April 15 and April 22, from 9 to 11 p.m. Langford and two other minority cell biologists, University of California at San Francisco Professor Wilfred Denetclaw, Jr.


Arts

Carmelita Tropicana dramatizes Latino and queer issues

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Carmelita Tropicana's performance last Friday in Collis Common Ground of her short play "Milk of Amnesia" gave insight into the lesbian Latino artist's attempt to regain her past culture. The play is a fictionalized version of Tropicana's real-life visit to her birthplace, Cuba, three years ago.