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

Women's laxers prevail over BC

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Yesterday's cold weather had little effect on the "intensity" of the women's lacrosse team as they extended their winning streak to three games by defeating Boston College 10-6 in Hanover. With the win, the Big Green, ranked fifth in the nation, improved their record to 3-1 heading into Saturday's Ivy League opener at Princeton. Leading 4-2 midway through the first half, the Big Green started to pull away.


Arts

Cassandra Wilson, diva of jazz and blues, releases new CD

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Beginning with the murkily moody single titled "Strange Fruit" and closing with a nature-inspired arrangement of the Neil Young classic "Harvest Moon," Cassandra Wilson begins and ends her new CD "New Moon Daughter" by showing one-time listeners and jazz connoisseurs alike that jazz is truly a state of mind. The title "New Moon Daughter" was inspired by a proverb that says illness accompanies a wandering moon, and a new moon cures disease.


Sports

Men's tennis sweeps 4 of 5 teams

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Riding a strong spring break performance all the way back to Hanover, the Big Green men's tennis team is looking forward to another successful season. Winning four out of five matches on the 12 day road trip, the team posted its best West Coast record in recent history.



Sports

Women's lacrosse has strong start

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Entering the season as the fifth-ranked team in the nation, the women's lacrosse team posted a 2-1 record on their spring road trip, defeating Richmond and Duke but falling to fourth-ranked James Madison University.


News

Sleazy goes to Germany for international contest

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Sleazy the Wonder Squirrel is going to Europe. The walking, talking, chain-smoking cartoon rodent who stars in a comic strip in The Dartmouth is taking an all-expense-paid trip to Germany for the week-long Stutgart International Animation Festival, where he and his creator, Chris Miller '97, will compete with students from around the world for up to $3,000 in prizes. Sleazy is the star of a five-minute, full-color animated film Miller created for a Film studies independent study project.


Sports

Baseball thrashes Babson in shutout

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Showing that the work against tough schools in Arizona over spring break paid off, the Dartmouth baseball team shellacked Babson College 16-0 yesterday in Massachusetts. In their first game back since going winless in seven games against a slew of highly-ranked schools in Arizona, Dartmouth struck early and often against Babson, compiling 21 hits to only three from the Beavers. "I am happy for the kids.


News

COP releases survey, seeks feedback

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Seeking feedback from the Dartmouth community, the Committee on Organization and Policy released the results of its 1995 Winter term survey about the College's Academic Honor Principle along with a list of recommendations for how the College should improve the honor code. The report compiled the results of questionnaires, completed by 310 randomly selected students and 220 members of the faculty, about the effectiveness of student-professor communications regarding the honor code. According to the COP report, which was released on March 11, the survey's findings indicate that no major changes in the College's honor principle are necessary. "The consensus was that the honor principle is a valued and important aspect of the Dartmouth experience, and is respected by the vast majority of both students and faculty," the report states.



Arts

Rabies incidents surge in area near College

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The recent surge in the number of rabies cases in Hanover reminds Dartmouth students to be careful when dealing with animals in order to avoid contracting the deadly disease. Rabid animals were found in the area around West Wheelock Street last fall, but they have relocated in the corner of town near Rip Road, Reservoir Road and the Hemlock Road area this spring, according to the Valley News. Director of College Health Services Jack Turco emphasized that the reported cases have only been among wild animals. "Some rabid animals have been found," he said.



Opinion

Pregnancy or Philosophy?

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People often think it is easy to major in philosophy, but they are wrong. They assume it is a lot of nonsense and phil students get to sit around all day and discuss whether they exist or not, and if they do, is it right to steal someone else's North Face jacket if nobody is around to see them slipping out of the frat with it. However, as someone who has taken fourteen philosophy classes, I can tell you it is not all fun and games.



News

New Film course examines diversity

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"Creative Video," a course offered through the film studies department as part of a national project that examines the issue of diversity on campus through documentaries, met for the first time yesterday. A program known as "--ism(n.)" is sponsoring classes like "Creative Video" at 12 colleges across the country, including Dartmouth, through funding by the Ford Foundation. All of the --ism(n.) courses will involve students making both individual videos and group videos that explore the effects of diversity on their lives according to a brochure published by --ism(n.). Director of the Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Mary Childers, one of the course's three instructors, said Creative Video will focus on technical aspects of the documentary process. Assistant Director of Media Productions Michael Murray and co-Director of Consultation and Multicultural Services Sandra Spiegel will also teach this team-taught course. Childers said she was pleased with the turnout for the first day of class. "A very good group of students showed up ... with a variety of interests," she said.


Opinion

I'm Glad to be Back

Top ten reasons I'm glad to be back: Because Enrico, my waiter at Paradise Beach Resort and Casino, charged me $18.50 for every glass of alcohol I consumed, while the brothers at Dartmouth fraternities couldn't care less if I asked to bathe in a keg instead of drinking a cup of beast, and I don't even have to tip them. 9.Because whenever the phone rang during break, instead of saying "Hello?" like a normal person, the only thing I could manage to mutter was, "Blitz me." 8.Because I got tired of watching my dog hook up. 7.Because after a week of eating my mother's Filet Mignon with Glazed Baby Carrots and Rice Pilaf and her Grilled Swordfish Served over Asparagus Spears in a Creamy Butter Sauce, not to mention her Veal Parmesan accompanied by a steaming bowl of Fettucini Alfredo, all I really wanted for dinner was a breadstick from EBAs. 6.Because as much as I love watching TV, after seeing Rolanda's special report on "Sexy UPS Men and the Cross-Dressers Who Love Them," I began to rejoice the fact that the TV in my dorm room only receives one channel. 5.Because I got tired of watching my cat hook up. 4.Because although I enjoyed contemplating the meaning of life, predicting the presidential campaign polls, discussing foreign policy and weighing the pros and cons of nuclear energy with my brother, there's only so much a two-year old can say. 3.Because when I went to visit my friends at Harvard on Saturday night, I got frostbite waiting outside because they wouldn't let me in the library without a Harvard ID. 2.Because on a Friday night after dinner, my parents hand me a dishrag and a bottle of Palmolive and say, "Finish quickly so you can go to bed", while my roommates hand me a funnel and a couple of beers and say, "Finish quickly so I can go next." 1.Because being home for spring break can be as distressing as getting housing number 4756298746592873 four years in a row and having to live in an inflatable tent on top of Mount Mousilauke while all your friends have rooms in the New Dorms and complain about the fact that the maid uses lemon scent Lysol instead of alpine fresh in their private bathroom...




News

Assembly reshapes policies, goals

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After a relatively sedate fall, the Winter term Student Assembly took a more active role as it responded to campus issues, provided more student services and passed pragmatic resolutions. Assembly members have avoided the infighting which nearly destroyed the body last year, but the dawning of Spring term with the upcoming elections has some worried that the harmonious nature of the Assembly may be threatened. "Spring term will be difficult," Dean of Student Life Holly Sateia said.