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The Dartmouth
December 16, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Clinton plan prescribes few changes for students

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Capitation. Gatekeepers. Health Alliances. The terminology of President Clinton's health care plan seems hostile and uninviting, but the plans' goals are simple -- universal access to primary health care for everyone -- even college students. Clinton's plan intends to change the way health care is provided and paid for and everyone at Dartmouth -- students, faculty, and employees will be affected. Worried about the rising costs of health care and the growing number of uninsured Americans, Clinton made reforming the health care system a major part of his campaign platform last year. The White House recently released the plan that First Lady Hillary Clinton and a team of experts have been working on since the President's inauguration last January. Although the plan is sure to be revised in upcoming battles with Congress, the original version offers a glimpse into the solution that Clinton has for the nations' health care problem and how that will affect Dartmouth students and employees. Clinton proposes to provide health insurance to all Americans by mandating that companies pay for employees' health insurance.


News

No guarantees for education dept.

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Administrators said yesterday they cannot guarantee that the education department will offer classes until 1997, exposing a rift between the department and the Dean of Faculty Office and confusing students who were told they could earn a certificate in education before they graduate. George Wolford, the assistant dean of faculty for the social sciences, called an announcement from the education department to the Class of 1997 "a premature communication." "There wasn't sufficient consultation between their department and our office," Wolford said. Wolford said students will be updated as soon as the College knows more about the department's future.




Arts

Computerized music raises eyebrows

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A concert of electro-acoustical music presented last night in the Top of the Hop by Dartmouth faculty and graduate students posed many difficult questions, which ultimately involved the meaning of music itself. The difficulties of the performance first out of its virtual lack of performers.


News

Artzer: follow me

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At the second Student Assembly meeting of the term last night, president Nicole Artzer '94 lashed out at a temporary committee that voided many of her executive appointments. On Sunday, the committee on procedure said seven of Artzer's 10 appointments to the executive committee violated the Assembly's constitution because they were not official Assembly members. So now Artzer's executive committee can not fully function until the seven members go through the official process of joining the Assembly --which could take another two weeks. But Artzer told the Assembly last night that its primary concern should be helping the student body, not political infighting. "Let's think a little about why we are here," she said. She said she was happy that the student body was the main concern of the Assembly at-large and presidential candidates last year. "It thrilled me," she said.




News

Professors open Mideast series

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Three professors discussed the implications and effects of the recent accord between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization last night during the first of a series of lectures on "The Search for Peace in the Middle East." Anthropology Professor Dale Eickelman, Asian Studies Professor Shalom Goldman and Government Professor Diederik Vandewalle formed the panel, which addressed a Rockefeller Center audience.


News

Protesters challenge Review at open house

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Seven hecklers joined approximately 50 students who turned out at the Tavern Room in the Hanover Inn last night for The Dartmouth Review's fall open house. One protester said the conservative off-campus journal "makes many people at Dartmouth feel uncomfortable and we want to let them, especially the freshmen, know that there are people who strongly disagree with the opinions of The Dartmouth Review." The Review's president, Douglas Beekman, addressed critics who say the journal is a bastion for the opinions of conservative, white men. "If you're a white male, please come up to the office, or else we're going to start losing our reputation," Beekman joked. Following Beekman's speech on the business side of the Review, staffers showed a video of clips from national television shows that featured the Review. The clips, from news shows such as "Crossfire" and "60 Minutes," included a "20/20" interview with Professor William Cole, the former chair of the College's music department, who resigned in 1988 following a controversy in which the Review staffers severely criticized his teaching methods in class and in the journal. The video, which elicited much laughter from the audience, also included an interview with a former Review editor-in-chief who said Cole was "emblematic of one of the main problems at Dartmouth: if you seem oppressed you can get a job for life at Dartmouth." In his speech following the video tape, Review Editor in Chief Oron Strauss '95 called the journal's accomplishments "mighty" and cited the current absence of a gay and lesbian studies department at the College as one of the Review's "great triumphs." The College is the only Ivy League school that does not have a gay studies department. Strauss also called the Review a model for more than 100 papers nationwide that "defy the politically correct, liberal orthodoxy." Protesters laughed when Strauss said, "The only hate at Dartmouth is the hate directed at the Review." Strauss also mentioned that he and other Review staff members are often called racist by administrators and faculty who have never met them. Professor Emeritus Jeffrey Hart, a senior editor at The National Review, said the journal has kept the discussion on racism, sexism and homophobia going and "not let it sink to name-calling and intellectual bullying." He cited some of the achievements of former Review staff members and said "the editorship of the Review has been more diverse than [College President James] Freedman's own office." Hart said, "To work for The Dartmouth Review is one of the best things you can do for Dartmouth College." Hart said the Review was responsible for changes made this year to Social Issues Night, an activity held during freshman week.


News

Medical center will offer free depression screening

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Psychiatrists at the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center will offer free screening this week for students who think they suffer from clinical depression. Members of the psychiatry department at the medical school hope to raise awareness of mental illnesses, particularly depression, by offering the free screening as part of national Mental Illness Awareness Week, which began Monday. "While most everyone experiences low times when life seems drab and unrewarding, usually the short-term feelings do not keep us from functioning on a day-to-day level," said Dr. C.




News

Ceremony remembers Chang '93

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Friends and family of Lisabette Chang '93, who died in July, gathered to remember her yesterday at a memorial service in Rollins Chapel. Chang, a presidential scholar who had returned to school after a two-year battle with leukemia, died of a cardiac arrest while swimming in the Connecticut River. The service was led by Rev.


News

Committee voids Artzer's selections

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A special Student Assembly committee voided many of president Nicole Artzer's '94 executive appointments last night, leaving the Assembly with a patch-work governing body for at least the next week. A temporary committee on procedure, formed Sunday night, said yesterday that seven of Artzer's 10 executive committee appointments were unconstitutional. The executive committee, made up of the president, the vice president, the secretary, the treasurer and the co-chairs of the Assembly's five committees, decides what issues the Assembly should discuss. Artzer said she will not make new appointments to the executive committee.


News

AfriCaSo plans ethnic fashion show

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AfriCaSo, the College's African and Caribbean students' organization, announced plans to sponsor a dinner and fashion show, discussion panels and a reggae concert. The dinner and fashion show, scheduled for Nov.



Opinion

Michigan's Engler shows what government can do

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With the Clinton administration firmly ensconced in Washington D.C. and the Freedman administration entrenched in Hanover, as a conservative columnist, it is very easy to lapse into a pattern of only complaining about what is wrong in our nation and at our College. Not eager to become, in former Vice President Spiro Agnew's words, "a nattering nebob of negativity," this week I wanted to let you know about a place where government is actually succeeding.



News

DOC retreats to Moosilauke

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The Dartmouth Outing Club held its annual Moosilauke Fall Weekend on Saturday and Sunday at Moosilauke Lodge, where the club hosted more than 100 students. The participants engaged in passive and active outdoor activities, ranging from sleeping during the bus ride and lounging all day to running the traditional 50-mile hike in 11 hours and 55 minutes. Cory Smith '96 and Colton Leys '96, both members of the cross-country ski team, began the 50- mile trek at 5:45 a.m.


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