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The Dartmouth
December 24, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

The Gap signs lease

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The Gap, a national chain of clothing retailers, hopes to open its Hanover store by the first of June, College Real Estate Director Paul Olsen said. Olsen would not comment about the specifics of the lease, but he said The Gap has a 10 year lease with the College and an option to renew. The store will be located on Main Street in the space adjacent to the Hanover Inn, which was previously occupied by Brewster's and the Eleazar's Museum Shop.


Sports

Squash splits scores

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The Dartmouth Women's Squash Team worked its way to a 5-4 win over Amherst College this weekend, and is now perched at 3-3 for the year.






News

Assembly supports ROTC, attacks DDS

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The Student Assembly passed two motions last night - one in support of continuing the Reserve Officer Training Corps program at the College and the other calling for a one-day student boycott of Dartmouth Dining Services. The DDS boycott, scheduled to take place two weeks from today, is designed to protest what the Assembly called "insufficient flexibility" on the part of DDS to change their meal plan policies. In the ROTC resolution, the Assembly asked the Board of Trustees to "ensure the indefinite security of the ROTC program at the College." The Trustees will not discuss ROTC's future until their April meeting. ROTC In 1991 the Trustees announced that Dartmouth would discontinue ROTC if the military's ban on homosexuals was not lifted by April, 1993.


News

Amarna invites new members

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Amarna, the College's second co-ed undergraduate society, held its first full-fledged organizational meeting last night to actively seek new members. About 50 interested students came to the meeting in Blunt Alumni Center to learn more about the group and how it will operate.




Sports

Powerhouse Princeton downs men's swim team

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Princeton, one of the powerhouses of the Ivy League, defeated the Engineers on Saturday. Despite the loss, several swimmers showed strong individual performances. Thomas Slabaugh '96 swam the 100-yard backstroke in 54.3 seconds, and the 200-yard backstroke in 1:59.



News

New curriculum to begin with '98s

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Dean of Faculty James Wright told a committee of department chairs yesterday that the College now has sufficient funds to implement a broad new curriculum and that the changes will be in place for the Class of 1998. The Committee of Chairs, which meets once a term and is headed by College President James Freedman, also passed a recommendation to terminate the College's Budapest foreign study program and briefly discussed several committee reports dealing with admissions, financial aid and the College's honor principle before adjourning into a closed-door executive session. Although the faculty adopted the new degree requirements in April 1992, the plan's implementation was contingent on the Dean of Faculty's affirmation that the College had enough money to finance the changes. Wright said an $8 million donation last term by the wife of the late Harvey Hood '18 provided the College with sufficient funds for the new curriculum, which Wright estimated will cost the College an additional $2.4 million a year. "I'm very pleased to see us at this point," Wright said.


Sports

Basketball upsets Holy Cross

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As the Beatles might say, it is coming together, right now. Last night in Leede Arena the men's basketball team finally displayed an ability to dominate its opponents, blowing out Holy Cross 80-58.


News

DHMC to test massage

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Two researchers at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center have been awarded a one-year $30,000 grant from the Office of Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes of Health to study the effects of massage on patients who have had autologous bone marrow transplants. Denise Tope, Ph.D., and Brianne Pinkson, L.P.N., will collaborate in a study of 30 cancer patients who are scheduled for autologous bone marrow transplants. About half of the patients will receive massage therapy for their head, neck, shoulders and face for 20 minutes, three times a week, for three weeks, according to a DHMC press release. The other group of patients will act as a control group and have uninterrupted quiet time. "Massage seems to be such an intervention that gives the same effects as behavioral medicine treatments, such as relaxation techniques, without requiring much effort on the patient's part," she added. The NIH grant was the first grant awarded to the researchers at Dartmouth's Center for Pyscho-Oncology Research, founded in 1993 as part of the DHMC, according to the press release. The NIH grant was also one of the first series of 30 grants to be awarded by the Office of Alternative Medicine at NIH.


Arts

Marsalis does not disappoint

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"And that's kind of our motto...to swing at all cost," declared Wynton Marsalis to the eager crowd of over 600 before his septet began their first set.


News

BlitzMail perpetrator identified

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Using information provided by Computing Services, the College has identified the student who infiltrated the BlitzMail system in November and sent a computer virus to other students under the name of "Dartmouth Network Services." Last term, the individual broke into the College's electronic mail system and sent a program called "FileShare" to other students that made text run backward and caused several computers to crash, according to Nancy Hossfeld, director of user communications "Whoever sent this was pretending to be someone they weren't and pretending that the file was something that it wasn't," Hossfeld said. Such an action could violate the College's Computing Code, Dean of Freshman Peter Goldsmith said yesterday. Although the College is currently investigating the case, Senior Associate Dean of Students Daniel Nelson said he could not comment on the case and would not release the name of the student involved. Computing Services located the computer used to send the BlitzMail message within 24 hours of the initial complaint, Hossfeld said. Hossfeld said the electronic mail message was sent by a program that was incorporated into the BlitzMail system.



News

Despite rumors, friendly hop employee will stay

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Despite rumors to the contrary, Nick Zwirblia, the Courtyard Cafe employee whom students know as the "Happy Hop Guy," will not leave the College, but is instead cutting back on his hours so he can pursue other interests while working at the College. Students know Zwirblia as the friendly employee who enjoys chatting with patrons in the Hopkins Center's dining facility, frequently greeting hungry students with a "Hey Guy!


News

Professor wins Jeopardy

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The answer: This Dartmouth professor won $14,100 last night on Jeopardy. The question: Who is Government Professor Tom Nichols? Nichols appeared last night on the nationally televised game show where competitors give questions to match answers supplied by host Alex Trebek. Nichols beat his closest competitor by a mere $701 in a Final Jeopardy showdown to earn a second appearance on the television game show, which will air tonight. After getting on the board quickly with a $100 answer in the category of "Musical Terms," Nichols lost control of the board and was quickly silenced, until he was able to break back in with a successful question again in Musical Terms, "What is perfect pitch?" Nichols appeared to have trouble using his clicker early on, repeatedly attempting to buzz in without success until the pitch question. Although the London Potpourri category in the first round gave Nichols some difficulty, he only gave one incorrect question in the entire round. Nichols gave correct answers in all the first-round categories, which included Animals, Odd Words, Money, Musical Terms, London Potpourri and "My" Movies, but was unable to dominate any topic or sustain a run in any of the categories. Nichols repeatedly shifted his weight from one foot to the other until he got into his zone. After giving the correct question "What is $999,999.95?" in response to the answer "Five cents to be a millionaire," Nichols let a smile creep across his face and began to enjoy himself. Nichols finished the first round in second place with $1800 behind returning champion John Welsh, who earned $4200. But the many fans back home in Hanover waiting to hear Nichols mention Dartmouth, were disappointed when, during the player introductions at the end of the round, Trebek only asked about Nichols's recent trip to Moscow. "I hadn't been there in ten years," said Nichols, who went on to talk about the missing symbols of communism when Trebek piped in and added that McDonalds had replaced the old symbols. Nichols became more aggressive in the Double Jeopardy round which featured the categories 1953, Business Biggies, Sculpture, Black Americans, Children's Stories and Miscellaneous. Early on, Nichols landed the first of the round's two Daily Doubles and began his comeback. Trailing by $1,200, Nichols played dangerously and wagered $1,000 in the 1953 category. The answer was, "The Ohio Senator, called Mr. Republican, who died July 31, 1953." Nichols thought calmly for a moment, before giving the correct question, "Who is Robert Taft?" With that question, Nichols increased his total to $3,400, just $200 behind Welsh. Nichols's tally fluctuated throughout Double Jeopardy. At the end of Double Jeopardy, Nichols had amassed $8,800, but he only led the competition by $1,800. Then Nichols got lucky.