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

Men's hockey drops two home games

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There is an old adage in sports that says the first win of the season is the hardest one to get. The men's hockey team -- still winless through six regular season games -- will attest to this, having lost games to Colgate and Cornell over the weekend despite playing possibly its best hockey of the season. The Big Green dropped a tough 3-2 decision to the Colgate Red Raiders Friday night at Thompson Arena, and fell to the Cornell Big Red 4-3 in overtime on Saturday night. The losses dropped the Big Green to 0-5-1 overall on the season and 0-4-0 in the Eastern College Athletic Conference. Still, Coach Roger Demment asserted no one on the team is panicking. "It's still early in the season," he said.


Sports

Women's hockey splits weekend

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The women's hockey team split its first two regular season home games this past weekend. Saturday, the team narrowly missed an opportunity to defeat the University of New Hampshire, falling in a 3-2 loss.



Arts

DSO presents impressive interpretation of classics

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Under the baton of music director and conductor Anthony Princiotti, the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra presented an enjoyable rendition of three popular works from the standard orchestral repertoire to a full house. Saturday evening's concert began with an appropriately simple performance of the overture to Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro." The tone of the upper strings was clear, their touch was light and the performance was an energetic one. Perhaps too much so: Princiotti allowed the violin's momentum to take over, and by last section it had sped up considerably. The Violin Concerto in G Minor, by German composer Max Bruch, is among the more popular orchestral compositions for the instrument. Expressive melody takes precedence over virtuosic pyrotechnics, making the work both easily accessible for audiences and ideal material for young violinists. Patrick Kwon '96's performance of the violin solo was admirable in its technical precision. The rapid scales of the first movement were executed with agility and with mostly excellent intonation. The more lyrical second movement was equally skillful, and the finale's fiery gypsy character was handled with aplomb, though as with the Mozart, this enthusiasm caused an inappropriate accell-erando that the rest of the orchestra was not always prepared to follow. Throughout the course of the concerto, Kwon's technical mastery was beyond question. Even so, because the work's narrative is not one of technical accomplishment, but rather of lyric emotion, one wished he would have explored a more expressive realm of playing, especially in the use of greater dynamic contrasts to shape melodic lines. His level of playing is certainly high enough that he could afford the indulgence. The program concluded with Dvorak's Symphony No.





News

Luxon to screen video Winter term

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English Professor Thomas Luxon said he will not hold the second presentation of the "Hell Night" video and audio tapes until Winter term. Luxon had originally planned to show the tapes by the end of this term, but said many people were too busy with papers and exams to shift their attention to anything other than school work. Luxon said he was negotiating with sponsors to schedule the event sometime during the second week of Winter term.


News

Cornish: GOP welfare reforms are misguided

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Sociology Professor Steven Cornish said last night that the Republican party is misguided in its attempts to cut welfare programs. "It's an attempt to shift the value system of the United States in a direction that I'm not sure the majority of the population wants to go," Cornish said. Cornish was part of a three-member panel discussion on "The Effects of the Republican Agenda on Issues of Hunger," presented to a small audience in the Rockefeller Center for Social Sciences as part of Hunger Awareness Week. "They are not perfect," Cornish said of welfare programs, "but there is considerable evidence that these programs are helping." Cornish said the federal government needs to maintain its role as the "protector of last resort." He called the debate over welfare an "ideological struggle." "In this struggle, entitlements becomes a dirty word, and welfare recipients become demonized," Cornish said.


Sports

Sailing team finishes successful fall season

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Not rain, not sleet, not even snow was going to stop the Big Green women sailors from competing in the annual Atlantic Coast Championships this past weekend at Hobart. After canceling all races on Saturday because of high winds, the women sailors had to scrape ice off the boats and bail out snow on Sunday morning in order to sail. "There were some interesting conditions," Coach Brian Doyle said.



Sports

Equestrian concludes

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The Dartmouth equestrian team has been competing in full force this fall, with notable improvement, and finished its season last weekend at a show on Cape Cod. By placing second in the show sponsored by Boston University, the Big Green earned its highest place this year. Dartmouth was in first place at the show until BU's top rider squeaked by with a win in the last division, boosting BU's score to 41.



Opinion

Coverage focused on Greek negatives, not positives

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To the Editor: I'm writing to you about an article that appeared in the Nov. 14 edition of The Dartmouth titled "Greek Houses Win Awards." The Awards Banquet served as a formal closing and a means of recognizing the 1996 leadership within the Greek System.


News

Tiger talks about HIV

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Lisa Tiger, a Native American educator and women's activist, said in a speech Wednesday that building self-esteem and avoiding the perils of alcohol are essential to the fight against AIDS. "Self-esteem is a fragile thing," said Tiger to an audience of about 55 people in 105 Dartmouth Hall.



Sports

Hockey hosts two weekend games

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After two long, tough road trips, the men's hockey team is hoping the familiarity and comfort of playing at home this weekend will help the quest for the Big Green's first victory of the season. The Big Green take on the Colgate Red Raiders tonight at Thompson Arena at 7:30 p.m.


News

Professor talks about Unabomber

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Intrigued by the 35,000-word "manifesto" authored by the Unabomber, who is believed to be responsible for killing three people and injuring 22 in a series of bombings over the last 17 years, History Professor Richard Kremer decided to investigate the document for himself. And Kremer, who specializes in the history of science and teaches a course on scientific revolutions and modern society, said the manifesto provides important clues about the terrorist's identity. In June, the Unabomber sent the manuscript, which is titled "Industrial Society and Its Future," to The New York Times and The Washington Post, threatening to continue bombing unless one of the newspapers agreed to publish it.


News

Bollinger talks about freedom of speech

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Provost Lee Bollinger said yesterday that although Dartmouth is a private institution that cannot be controlled by the government, students do not abandon their First Amendment rights when they come to the College. Bollinger told a group of about 20 students in Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity that certain areas, like military bases and college campuses, are exempt from constitutional law. Although the Su preme Court allows school administrations to control the activities they sponsor, Bollinger said, "students don't give up their First Amendment rights at the schoolhouse gates." Much of the discussion centered around differences between speech laws in public institutions and private institutions, such as Dartmouth. "The Constitution does not apply to Dartmouth," Bollinger said, because it is a private organization.


News

Sophomore starts up new women's issue publication

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Lia Monahon '98, who was supposed to be an editor of the Spare Rib this term, left the publication to pioneer a new campus publication focusing on women's issues. The formal purpose of the new publication, which does not have a name yet, is "to publish a newspaper for and about women that serves as an outlet for a wide range of perspectives," Monahon said. "Other publications on campus serve a very narrow perspective," Monahon said.