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The Dartmouth
December 25, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Arts

Now playing In Hanover

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The most recent product of Woody Allen's romp in Europe, "To Rome with Love" uses both English and Italian to tell four self-contained but occasionally intermingled stories about the lives and loves of the visitors to and residents of Rome.


Mirror

Physical Education or Camp Dartmouth?

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Sophomore summer is arguably the best time to fulfill that dreaded P.E. requirement. With offerings like sailing, climbing, forestry, canoeing, golf, kayaking and cabin overnights, students can get that much closer to graduating while acting like a kid at summer camp. Many of the options, such as sailing, provide the perfect opportunity to venture away from Hanover.



Mirror

12X Playlist

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I Wanna Go Summer HeartThis is of those songs that combines intriguing vocals and instrumentals to create an undeniable summer feel. Wishes Beach HouseThe Beach House sound is unmistakable because it has such a distinct youth to it perfect for 12X. Oviedo Blind PilotHopefully 12X is stress-free as is, but just in case you need a little more carefree, this one is the most soothing. Time to Pretend MGMTThis track has "YOLO" written all over it (as long as one is conscious of "YOLO's" inherent stupidity, it's still funny). We Own the Sky M83This song gets you feeling like you can conquer the world and like anything is possible.





Mirror

Overheards

'14 guy 1: Sophomore summer only comes once! YOLO or die!'14 guy 2: Doesn't "YOLO" mean you die anyway?


Sports

32 freshman athletes will join Big Green football team

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The Big Green football team will welcome 32 new players to the squad for the 2012 season. The recruits range in weight by nearly 150 pounds and in height by 10 inches, and the freshmen will fill voids left by graduates to cover the array of positions on the team. Hailing from 17 different states and Washington, D.C., six of the incoming players will fly in from Florida and four will make the journey north from Texas, continuing the trend of Big Green football players that call the two states home. Although the majority of the recruits will travel a considerable distance from home to play at Dartmouth, one incoming freshman is a Hanover native. The recruiting process can vary, but players generally contact coaches and then either send out game films or invite coaches to watch their high school games.


News

Daily Debriefing

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In an effort to combat high-risk drinking, sexual assault and hazing, Dean of the College Charlotte Johnson proposed new alcohol policy reforms after discussions with Greek leaders, Johnson wrote in a campus-wide email sent Thursday afternoon.


News

Professor shares Native American experiences

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Educators from around the country came to Dartmouth this week to participate in a week-long seminar, sponsored by the New York-based Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History, aimed at improving the pedagogy of the discipline of Native American history and exploring Native American encounters with the Lewis and Clark expedition. Participants in the seminar, including teachers, library workers and National Park Service interpreters, were selected to attend through a competitive process and discussed broader facets of American Indian history, including government policies concerning native people and the importance of Native American history to understanding history. History and Native American studies professor Colin Calloway, the director of the seminar, said that the main focus was on the expedition as both a pivotal event in American history and a case study in cultural contact. "This is the second time I've done the seminar on Native American history at Dartmouth," Calloway said.


Mirror

The Mirror Guide to the Outdoors

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Summer is well under way, and we are collectively getting the hang of how Shakespeare doth speak while grudgingly setting our astro NROs (that midterm was a doozy). But the further we get into 12X, the harder it becomes to actually hit the books instead of the docks. The sun is hot, the sky is blue and the only thing we want to do is get outside and soak up some rays. Our hearts pine for the great outdoors! While we can't speed up the clocks in class, and we do not (officially) condone lack of attendance, we can provide you with ways to fill your free time with the best of the Upper Valley's outdoor activities. Straight from the mouths of experts of sophomore summers past and present with sprinklings of our own less qualified words of wisdom we bring you the 12X guide to outdoor fun.Get wet and wild: The Ledges Take a short drive through West Leb, continue South on 12A, turn left on True Brooks Road and you're there. You can jump off rocks into natural whirlpools and go for a dip in the swimming hole. "The ledges are a great place to go with a big group," Alejandra Herrera '14, who visited the spot early in the summer, said.


Mirror

Letter from the Editor

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Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff In my imagination, sophomore summer was a fantasy dreamland in which I would suddenly embrace everything about being outside bugs included.



News

Women's Forum hosts first panel

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Correction appended Sharing the common bond of graduating as some of the first women to attend Dartmouth, psychotherapist Martha Hennessey '76, author Nessa Flax '76 and minister Ann Beams '77 discussed qualities of leadership in front of approximately 80 women in Collis Common Ground on Tuesday night. The event, the first of the four-part "Women's Leadership Series," was organized by Women's Forum, an organization founded during Spring term that aims to initiate dialogue and promote community among female students at the College, according to the organization's summer co-directors Zheng-Yi Yang '14 and Anoush Arakelian '14. Hennessey, who was raised in Hanover, said that she wanted to go to Dartmouth when she was younger despite constant reminders that the College only accepted male students. After Dartmouth became coeducational in 1972, Hennessey said she approached admissions officers and told them she wanted to be the first woman to apply to the College. Hennessey initially enrolled at Vassar College to study psychology but transferred to Dartmouth for her sophomore year. Hennessey commended former College President John Kemeny for his efforts to integrate women into the Dartmouth community, despite a College culture that was generally unwelcoming to females at the time. "[Kemeny] truly believed in coeducation, and he was going to make it happen come hell or high water," she said. The prevailing opinion during that time was that women needed to "look, act and behave as much as possible like Dartmouth men," she said. "I had professors who were not supportive but degrading," she said, citing an occasion when one professor refused to acknowledge women as anything but "Smith dates," referring to the all-female Smith College in Massachusetts. Despite these challenges, Hennessey said her Dartmouth experience helped her develop leadership abilities. "I learned at Dartmouth that standing up for myself was an important thing, that in the end people would respect me," she said. Hennessey also advised the audience to support and celebrate each other as women of Dartmouth. "If you try to be like men, all you're doing is being as dumb as they are," she said, criticizing instances of hazing and binge drinking at the College. Flax, author of the book "Voices in the Hills: Collected Ramblings from a Rural Life," encouraged attendees to develop their own definitions of leadership and said that good leadership is extremely rare because leaders often try to protect the status quo and feel threatened by change. "If you are driven by ego rather than passion, your leadership will fail," she said. Flax, who also transferred to Dartmouth during the middle of her college career, said that she did not receive any encouragement from her deans to extend herself academically. Her book was published in 2012 with encouragement from members of the Dartmouth faculty, she said. "Don't let anyone talk you into doing anything you are not passionate about," she said. Beams, a minister at the Valley Presbyterian Church in Brookfield, Conn., said that the College was a very "traditional" place when she was a student. Few women attended the school, and many wondered how they would adapt to the already established culture, she said. Beam said that it was relatively easy to join student groups and most people were "personally welcoming." Beam also said that most professors at the College during that time were supportive. "The professors treated me like a student and expected me to prove myself on my own," she said. Students who attended the event said they enjoyed hearing about the experience of women who attended the College when it first become coeducational. "They were very straightforward about their opinion and their experience at the school," Winnie Yoe '14 said.


Arts

Ken Burns documentary on Dust Bowl to premiere at Hop

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By Katie taiThe Dartmouth Staff As the heat wave continues to relentlessly bake the Midwest and Northeast regions of the United States, many students in Hanover choose to fling themselves into the river or an air-conditioned room in hope of respite.



Opinion

Yang: Silencing Students

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Last week, the New Hampshire legislature overrode Governor John Lynch's veto on a bill requiring photo identification to vote in elections, thereby passing one of the most draconian voter ID laws in the United States.


News

Lync provides new chat options

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As part of the College's email migration to Microsoft Outlook, Computing Services has introduced a new application called Lync, which allows Dartmouth students and faculty to instant message, voice chat and video conference, according to Director of Academic and Campus Technology Services William Garrity. Lync, which came with the new email client package, integrates the Dartmouth Name Directory into an application that functions like Skype, Garrity said. "It looks a lot like the video desktop chat applications that you're used to," he said.