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The Dartmouth
December 15, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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Racist attacks hurt other minorities

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Along with racism and controversy, two perennially intimate bedfellows, Dartmouth College has found itself party to a less than holy trinity in the eyes of other minority communities in recent decades. Take, for example, the infamous 1986 shanty affair.


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SA helps to reduce high parking fines

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Student Assembly's two-year campaign to reform the fees and fines system has made more progress with a resolution to lower parking fines for students that will go into effect this summer. Under the new plan students will pay considerably less for parking violations in the "core" areas, such as behind Mass Row and near the Fayerweathers, Molly Stutzman '02, Student Life chair for the Assembly explained. Stutzman has been working with the Assistant Director of Administrative Services in Facilities, Operations & Management Bill Barr to restructure the parking fine system. Now students that have paid to park in A Lot will pay a fine of $25 for each ticket received.


News

Political tensions increase hostility toward Asian-Americans

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Declining popular opinion of Asian-Americans, and especially Chinese-Americans, have worried many in the Asian-American community that racism and stereotyping will always be a presence in American society. According to a recent survey conducted by consulting firm Yankelovich Partners, and commissioned by the Committee of 100, an elite group of Chinese-Americans that includes the likes of Yo-Yo Ma and architect I.M.



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Filmmaker looks for meaning of Asian-ness

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Renee Tajima-Pena, director of tonight's Hopkins Center featured documentary "My America (...or Honk if You Love Buddha)" said that rather than attempting to create a specific message with her work, she hopes that the film will encourage viewers to think critically about both sides of a controversial issue. "I usually make a film because I am really pissed off about something," she said, adding that in the process she often ends up learning just how complex and ambiguous most issues really are. The film, inspired in part by the peripatetic legacy of Jack Kerouac's "On the Road," takes Tajima-Pena on a physical and metaphoric journal around the country searching for what it means to be Asian American. There is no overarching theme to the film; Tajima-Pena allows each of the Asian Americans to tell their own unique story.







News

Parker calls for welfare reform

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Star Parker's speech "Pimps, Whores and Welfare Brats: The Stunning Transformation of a Former Welfare Queen" sparked heated debate from a crowd of nearly one hundred students yesterday evening. Parker, president and founder of the Coalition on Urban Renewal and Education and former welfare mother, brought the libertarian ideas she recently espoused on the Oprah Winfrey talk show and the Senate floor to a rather critical Dartmouth audience. According to Parker, due to the "failure" of 1960's Great Society legislation, both the welfare and Social Security systems are in need of large-scale reform, with the most important "steps out of poverty" being represented by personal responsibility and education. Although the inflammatory title of the speech incited rumors of possible student protest yesterday afternoon, most attendees calmly listened to her mainstream Republican views. Parker claimed that the current welfare system creates a sentiment of entitlement for recipients, most of whom live by the government -- prescribed mantra "don't work, don't save, don't get married." "Can anyone name one [welfare] program that works?" Parker challenged the audience. Indeed, she referred to the Social Security program as an illicit "pyramid scheme" in which "current workers pay for current retirees." Her views on the state of the country's education system were equally grim, especially regarding inner-city schools. "They're graduating kids who can't read the very condom packets they're passing out in the classroom," she said, making no secret of her Republican anti-abortion stance. Although no members of the audience challenged Parker's assertion that government programs are in need of reform, in the subsequent question and answer session, many took issue with the conservative methods she advocated for it's future improvement -- privatization of retirement savings accounts and school vouchers. One student pointed out that "there aren't enough schools" to accommodate the potential flood of students out of public education with the introduction of the voucher system. Yet another student asked the former "welfare queen" how the government should deal with the immediate problems of welfare families while the nation waits for the invisible hand to reshape the system in the long run. One of the more controversial aspects of Parker's speech was her emphasis on the role of religion in mainstreaming the lives of current welfare recipients.


News

Speaker discusses globalization

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Globalization and technology are creating a world that is increasingly interdependent and increasingly dependent on America, according to Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Dean of the Haas Business School at Berkeley and former National Economic Advisor to President Clinton. "Technology has made the slowdown much faster, more synchronized and it takes in more of the world," said Tyson in a well-attended lecture last night at Dartmouth's Cooke auditorium. The world is more interdependent than it ever has been before, said Tyson.




News

Tulloch to plead innocent today

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Robert Tulloch, the older of the two Vermont teenagers charged with the brutal stabbing deaths of Dartmouth professors Half and Susanne Zantop, will be pleading not guilty at his arraignment today, according to his lawyer, Richard Guerriero. "Robert is and should be presumed innocent," Guerriero said. Tulloch, 17, was indicted on two counts of first degree murder on April 19.


News

'Chalkings' mark 2004 weekend

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This weekend, 500 families of the freshman class came up to Hanover for "Unfourgettable Weekend," this year's freshman family weekend theme, and the recent rash of chalkings on campus sidewalks put gender relations on the minds of many visitors to the campus. "The chalkings brought an important issue to light," Ryan Bennett '04 said, adding that the First Year Family Weekend committee blitzed out to organizations on campus asking them about adding an event to the weekend for "a more constructive discussion or forum with the group involved with the chalkings." The weekend did feature a deans' panel called "Info You Need to Know," a question and answer session led by class deans as well as the dean of residential life and the dean of the Tucker Foundation. Held in Collis Commonground, the well-attended event gave parents a chance to ask about what their children will need to know over the remainder of their time at Dartmouth.



News

Zeta Psi formally charged

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Zeta Psi fraternity will face College charges for the series of offensive newsletters attributed to the house and will soon participate in judicial hearings.



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CFS houses are evaluated annually to ensure Minimum Standards are met

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As their name would suggest, "Minimum Standards" are the official requirements spelled out by the College on the basis of which members of the Coed Fraternity Sorority system maintain their College recognition. "It's basically an agreement between the two corporate entities ... that both created the CFS system and set standards for organizations continuance at the College," Dean of Residential Life Martin Redman said.


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