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The Dartmouth
October 11, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
Arts

Review: ‘The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’ cannot have it all

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Last June, Australian comedian Hannah Gadsby released her Netflix stand-up special “Nanette.” The show received critical acclaim and an entire literature of think-pieces, not because it was especially funny or because the jokes were radical (although they were), but because Gadsby used her special to question what it means to use self-deprecating comedy as a woman, a queer individual and as an “other” who exists in the margins.


Arts

‘Mary Queen of Scots’ wastes potential due to choppy writing

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In his video “Ludonarrative Dissonance,” film essayist Dan Olson advocates the use of the term “Cinemanarrative Dissonance.” The term describes when an aspect of a film flounders because two or more creative departments did competent work that was nevertheless contradictory due to the lack of a strong, unified vision for the overall product.









The Dartmouth men's hockey team is off to a solid 4-2-1 start in conference play.
Sports

Ten teams see action over winter break

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Swimming: Leko and LaMastra headline early meets    Before a training trip to the Florida Keys, the Big Green swimming and diving teams traveled to Brown University and Bates College for a pair of meets after Thanksgiving.      First-year Mia Leko ’22 highlighted the three-day Bruno Invitational, which began Nov.










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News

UGAs voice complaints about compensation

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Fourteen undergraduate advisors, from those who work in upperclassmen and first-year residences to those who reside in Living Learning Communities, have voiced a variety of complaints against the Office of Residential Life that they are not adequately compensated for training and weekly responsibilities and that the ORL has not been adequately responsive to their concerns. 


News

Early decision cycle sees increase in applications

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Henry Mans ’23 wanted to go to college in a small town connected to nature. A recently-accepted student from Edina, Minn., Mans said that Dartmouth was his first choice school because of its size, location and academic strength. “It was big for me to be in a more rural place,” he said.