The Dartmouth 01/21/14

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VOL. CLXXI NO. 11

PM SNOW HIGH 11 LOW -4

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

Title IX investigators to Protest stalls MLK keynote visit campus next week

By HANNAH HYE MIN CHUNG dŚĞ ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ ^ƚĂī

SPORTS

WOMEN’S HOCKEY GOES 1-1 PAGE 12

OPINION

ADDRESSING ATHEISM PAGE 4

ARTS

STUDENT SPOTLIGHT: MICHELLE KHARE ’14 PAGE 7

A LOOK TOWARD THE OSCARS PAGE 8 READ US ON

DARTBEAT GUESSING THE NEXT CARNIVAL SCULPTURE FOLLOW US ON

TWITTER @thedartmouth COPYRIGHT © 2014 THE DARTMOUTH, INC.

HANOVER, NEW HAMPSHIRE

Investigators from the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights will visit campus from Jan. 27 to Jan. 30 as part of a Title IX investigation into the College’s climate surrounding sexual assault. Students, faculty, alumni and staff are encouraged to speak with the representatives regarding issues of sexual harassment and violence, according to a message from the Office for Civil Rights distributed to campus in a daily digest email Monday morning. During the visit, the Office

for Civil Rights plans to gather perspectives on Dartmouth’s responses to cases of sexual assault, as well as solicit possible solutions, a statement from the Department of Education said. “Dartmouth is fully cooperating with the Department of Education’s compliance review and hoping for a positive resolution,” College spokesperson Justin Anderson said in an emailed statement. “Representatives from the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights will be SEE TITLE IX PAGE 5

SHARON CHO/THE DARTMOUTH

Protesters congregated on the Moore Theater stage on Monday evening.

B y JASPER BINGHAM

Twenty-six men sink bids in winter rush

By SARA MCGAHAN

Fraternities extended 26 bids at the conclusion of men’s winter recruitment last weekend, according to Interfraternity Council rush chair Brett Kana ’14. The number of new members is comparable to past winter rush processes. Seven fraternities extended 30 bids last year. Alpha Chi Alpha fraternity saw one man accept a bid; Chi

Gamma Epsilon fraternity, Sigma Nu frater nity and Zeta Psi fraternity each saw five; and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, seven, Kana said. Three men accepted bids at Kappa Kappa Kappa this year, members confirmed. While Tri-Kap has historically held winter recruitment, it chose not to do so in 2013. SEE RUSH PAGE 3

dŚĞ ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ ^ƚĂī

Community members took to the Moore Theater stage before ABC News correspondent John Quinones’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Day keynote address on Monday evening, protesting indifference to racial and economic inequality, as well as sexual assault. Roughly a third of the audience participated, unfurling large colorful signs. “Enough distraction — where is the action?” read one. Another protester held up the Anarchist movement’s symbol, an encircled “A.”

Afro-American Society president Jalil Bishop ’14, who introduced College President Phil Hanlon, led the protest. After the president’s remarks, Bishop remained at the podium for over 20 minutes. “I’m really not here for claps, I’m really not here for celebration,” Bishop began. “I’m here to try to inspire, try to get one person to step up and be more of a change agent than they were when they came in the room today.” Bishop said Dartmouth has not done enough to embrace King’s mission for racial justice.

“Dartmouth is complicit,” he said. “We are complicit in failing to break down the structure that keeps so many black and brown bodies across the country and around the world marginalized, and keeps so many white bodies benefitting from that marginalization.” Bishop said that although King and his message of nonviolence have dominated discussions about the Civil Rights movement, memories of protest and the use of force have faded from the dialogue. He advocated SEE MLK PAGE 5

Students present on cross-cultural experiences in forum

B y MIN KYUNG JEON dŚĞ ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ ^ƚĂī

Over winter break, Mary Peng ’15 traveled to rural Beijing with several other Dartmouth students to teach English to the children of migrant workers. At the fifth annual Student Forum on Global Learning on Mon-

day, Peng and dozens of other students spoke about cross-cultural experiences that ranged from domestic internships and research opportunities to international service trips and study abroad programs. T h e fo r u m revo l ve d around the theme of “a time for positive and vigor-

ous action” and consisted of student-led sessions moderated by faculty. The 2014 forum differed from previous years’ in its emphasis on graduate and professional student participation, said assistant director of undergraduate advising and research Jill Savage, who co-chaired the event and sat

on its planning committee. The presentations have also grown more diverse over the forum’s five years, with students presenting on many different types of opportunities. This year’s forum also included a visual exhibition of research. In a presentation titled “Our Most Powerful Tool:

English,” Peng discussed her involvement in the Dandelion Project, which aims to bridge the education gap between children of migrant workers and their wealthier urban counterparts in China. Peng and several other SEE FORUM PAGE 3


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TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH NEWS

DAily debriefing Jan. 18, 1:35 a.m. — An individual contacted Safety and Security from Massachusetts Row about a fellow student, whose parents had expressed concern about the student’s chest pains. Safety and Security WNĂ…KMZ[ TWKI\ML \PM [\]LMV\ LM\MZUQVML PM _I[ Ă…VM IVL I[SML PQU to contact his parents. Jan. 18, 2:03 a.m. — Safety and Security responded to a complaint from Russell Sage Hall, where a student and a non-student were intoxiKI\ML IVL IXXMIZML \W PI^M JMMV [UWSQVO UIZQR]IVI 0IVW^MZ 8WTQKM IZZM[\ML JW\P QVLQ^QL]IT[ IVL KWVĂ…[KI\ML \PM ITKWPWT IVL LZ]O ZMTI\ML paraphernalia. The student was released to Safety and Security and ILUQ\\ML \W ,QKSÂź[ 0W][M NWZ \PM VQOP\ Jan. 18, 7:50 a.m. — Safety and Security responded to a call from I [\]LMV\ QV WVM WN \PM .IaMZ_MI\PMZ 0ITT[ ZMY]M[\QVO I _MTNIZM KPMKS on a friend who had made concerning statements. Safety and Security TWKI\ML \PM [\]LMV\ _PW _I[ [TMMXQVO JZW]OP\ PMZ \W ,QKSÂź[ 0W][M IVL TI\MZ \ZIV[XWZ\ML PMZ JIKS \W PMZ ZM[QLMVKM PITT Jan. 18, 5:50 p.m. ¸ ) ;INM\a IVL ;MK]ZQ\a WNĂ…KMZ IVL \PM 0IVW^MZ 8WTQKM UM\ _Q\P IV QVLQ^QL]IT [MTTQVO XWKSM\SVQ^M[ NZWU \PM \Z]VS WN PQ[ KIZ QV \PM <PWUX[WV )ZMVI XIZSQVO TW\ 0M _I[ QVNWZUML WN \PM College’s weapons policy and told that he needed a permit. After IXWTWOQbQVO \PM QVLQ^QL]IT ZM\]ZVML \PM SVQ^M[ \W PQ[ KIZ IVL _MV\ \W \PM PWKSMa OIUM Jan. 20, 2:26 a.m. — Safety and Security responded to a Good Samaritan call for an individual who was intoxicated and may have JMMV M`XMZQMVKQVO [MQb]ZM[ <PM QVLQ^QL]IT _I[ \ZIV[XWZ\ML NZWU *ISMZ *MZZa 4QJZIZa \W ,QKSÂź[ 0W][M _PMZM PM _I[ ILUQ\\ML NWZ \PM VQOP\ Jan. 20, 5:59 a.m. ¸ ;INM\a IVL ;MK]ZQ\a ZMKMQ^ML VW\QĂ…KI\QWV \PI\ I [IVL \Z]KS PIL SVWKSML W^MZ I TIUX XW[\ JM\_MMV 2]LOM 0ITT IVL \PM <]KS ;KPWWT 4Q^QVO IVL 4MIZVQVO +WUXTM` J]QTLQVO <PM XW[\ _I[ \ISMV LW_V \MUXWZIZQTa IVL \PM IZMI [MK]ZML ¸ +75814-, *A 3)<0-:16- 5++766-44 The blotter, available in full on Dartbeat.com, has been condensed for print.

CORRECTIONS ?M _MTKWUM KWZZMK\QWV[ 1N aW] JMTQM^M \PMZM Q[ I NIK\]IT MZZWZ QV I [\WZa please email editor@thedartmouth.com.

Sorority rushchangesfitinlargernarrative B y Brian chalif

The Dartmouth Staff

Changes to this year’s winter sororQ\a ZMKZ]Q\UMV\ ZMÆMK\ UQVWZ [PQN\[ QV I long, evolving history of rush processes I\ \PM +WTTMOM <PQ[ aMIZ I \ITS WV L]M[ XPQTIV\PZWXa IVL Ă…VIVKQIT IQL I[ _MTT as an anonymous question-and-answer session, replaced song-and-dance routines. <_MIS[ \W \PQ[ aMIZÂź[ XZWKM[[ _MZM prompted by a “call to actionâ€? email that Ă…^M 8IVPMTTMVQK +W]VKQT M`MK]\Q^M[ [MV\ \W KIUX][ WV 2IV ! M`XTIQVQVO \PMQZ decision to abstain from winter recruitment. The executives cited exclusivity by race, gender, sexual orientation and [WKQWMKWVWUQK [\I\][ I[ ÆI_[ QV \PM recruitment system. Confusion stemming from the email’s wording led some students to believe that rush had been canceled. “To the women who wanted to rush \PQ[ Y]IZ\MZ" ?M SVW_ W]Z LMKQ[QWV may feel unfair to you,â€? the email read. “However, we feel that enabling you to

enter this unchanging cycle would be UWZM ]VR][\ Âş While many students interviewed by The Dartmouth were surprised by the notion of eliminating this season’s sorority rush, cancelling winter recruitment is not unprecedented. 1V !! IVL 8IVPMTT ^W\ML VW\ to hold winter rush, instead permitting sororities to extend a limited number of open bids. Both cancellations occurred because most sororities were nearly full from fall recruitment. “Winter recruitment isn’t really a ,IZ\UW]\P \ZILQ\QWV Âş NWZUMZ 8IVPMTT XZM[QLMV\ 5IZQIU 5ITQS )T[QSIĂ… Âź! said at the time, calling it a large drain on sorority resources and members’ time. The smaller winter pledge classes, which in her time at the College usually comprised only two or three students, did not receive the attention that she believed new members deserve and resulted in higher drop out rates. Historically, changes to recruitment have involved both chapter representa\Q^M[ IVL UMUJMZ[ WN 8IVPMTT

8IVPMTT IVL \PM [WZWZQ\QM[ _WZSML ^MZa KTW[MTa QV _PMV \PMa QUXTMUMV\ML \PM [MTMK\ IVL ZIVS KWUX]\MZ system. 8IVPMTT [WZWZQ\a XZM[QLMV\[ IVL 6I\QWVIT 8IVPMTTMVQK +W]VKQT ZMXZMsentatives collaborated to change the ZMKZ]Q\UMV\ XZWKM[[ [IQL NWZUMZ 8IVPMTT vice president of recruitment Melissa 4WSMV[OIZL Ÿ ! 5W[\ KWTTMOM[ W^MZ[MMV Ja 6I\QWVIT 8IVPMTTMVQK +W]VKQT PIL ][ML \PM [a[\MU [QVKM \PM MIZTa !! [ 4WSMV[OIZL said. This prompted the switch. 1V \PM XZM^QW][ [a[\MU XW\MV\QIT new members had little say in which [WZWZQ\a \PMa ]T\QUI\MTa RWQVML 1V[\MIL each student would visit all of the houses for round one, then receive an invitation to round two from individual sororities. The computer system provides more of an equal opportunity, she said. Winter recruitment’s popularity has QVKZMI[ML [QOVQÅKIV\Ta QV \PM XI[\ \_W LMKILM[ 1V !! _WUMV IKKMX\ML bids during winter recruitment, whereas TI[\ _QV\MZ \PM V]UJMZ ZMIKPML !

A  Timeline:  20  Years  of  Sorority  Recruitment 1994 Panhell decides to offer a second term of rush, in the winter, in an effort to include more women. A new policy mandates that all women who complete recruitment receive a bid. For the first time, if a woman receives a bid and declines to accept it, she is barred from participating in recruitment for one year. 1997 Panhell does not hold winter recruitment, but rather “continuous open bidding,â€? in which sororities extend bids until reaching their limit. 1998 Panhell reinstates winter recruitment. After the two-round rush process, participants submit preference cards ranking the seven houses and about 20 women receive bids. 2000 Winter recruitment is canceled. Each sorority is allowed to extend up to two open bids to accommodate students who were off-campus in the fall. 2002 After canceling fall recruitment, the College holds a large winter rush. About 200 women receive bids. 2004 Panhell extends sorority recruitment into a 10-day process. The change allows potential new members more time to meet sisters at each sorority and make their decisions. 2006 Of the 49 women participating in a six-day winter rush process, 87 percent receive bids. 2010 Sororities extend bids to 91 of 103 participants. 2011 Of the 110 women who rush, seventy-four percent of participants receive bids.

1995 Lack of demand leads sororities to cancel formal winter recruitment. 1996 Panhell adds an initial round of recruitment consisting of 30-minute parties at each sorority, similar to the current first round, to allow potential new members to meet more sisters. Everyone receives an invitation to the second round. Panhell also considers and implementing a lottery system. The lottery system would take into account the preferences of individuals and sororities, but it would allegedly alleviate feelings of rejection. Panhell decides instead to add a new sorority, Alpha Xi Delta, in 1997. 1999 Panhell adds a “round zero� to recruitment emphasizing each house’s service programs. This round was then eliminated several years later. 2001 After two women drop out of the process, the remaining 35 of 37 women participating in rush receive bids. 2003 Sororities conduct winter recruitment, but student opposition to the winter-only rush process remains strong. 2005 The College reinstates fall recruitment to remedy the financial burden on affiliated students. Without new members in the fall, houses received dues from two classes, not three. 2008 The select-and-rank computer system is adopted. This system is very similar to the current one in place: after round one, students pick their top four sororities and rank their bottom three. In past years, students had ranked all seven existing sororities after round one. 2014 After five executive members of Panhell abstain from rush, sorority presidents implement minor changes to the process, including replacing a song-and-dance routine with an anonymous question-and-answer session and financial aid talk.


TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

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THE DARTMOUTH NEWS

Library pursues digitization efforts, expands electronic collection B y ROSHAN DUTTA The Dartmouth Staff

The College’s libraries will grow its collection of online texts and expand its electronic resource offerings in a campaign to diversify its collection of roughly 639,000 e-books. The initiative, which will also focus on digitizing pictures and texts, follows a fall 2012 pilot program. Digital library intern Taylor Hornig ’13 said the digitization initiatives target primarily nontext materials. “One of the most important things we do is create digital versions of unique, difficult-to-access items that often aren’t books at all,” Hornig said. “Their digital versions are a lot more convenient for a student or researcher to use than their print versions.” Maps, music, poster s and lectures are among the non-text materials included in the library’s digital collections. The College is a member of various consortia and virtual li-

braries that offer additional online resources. Associate librarian for information management David Seaman said that the push to acquire electronic versions of books and journals results in part from their accessibility, but also because some

͞/ ĮŶĚ ĞͲŬƐ ŝŶĐƌĞĚŝďůLJ ĐŽŶǀĞŶŝĞŶƚ͕ ĂŶĚ ƵƐƵĂůůLJ ƵƐĞ ƚŚĞŵ ǁŚĞŶĞǀĞƌ ƉŽƐƐŝďůĞ ŝŶ ůŝĞƵ ŽĨ ƉĂƉĞƌ͘͟ ͳ <h^, ^ / ͛ϭϳ

publishers provide exclusively electronic versions of certain books and journals. In many subject areas, particularly the sciences, e-books and electronic journals are often the default or the only available form of publication, he said. Expanding the College’s collections of electronic resources is one

way of increasing their availability to students, faculty and staff. Digital resources and scholarly communication programs director Barbara DeFelice said she believes not many students utilize the library’s search system to sort through Dartmouth’s e-book collection. “People may not be aware that we handle the licensing and availability of electronic books much in the same way that we do for print books,” DeFelice said. Akash Kar ’16 and Kush Desai ’17 both said they use the library’s online collection frequently for research and academic reading. Desai, a Kindle user, said he is very familiar with the library’s electronic resources. “I find e-books incredibly convenient, and usually use them whenever possible in lieu of paper,” he said. The library’s electronic collection also allows the College to overcome the limits of shelf space, which is struggling to accommodate a collection of 2.65 million

KELSEY KITTELSEN/THE DARTMOUTH STAFF

^ƚƵĚĞŶƚƐ ƐƟůů ƉƌĞĨĞƌ ƚŽ ƵƐĞ ƉŚLJƐŝĐĂů ƚĞdžƚŬƐ ŽǀĞƌ ƚŚĞŝƌ ĞůĞĐƚƌŽŶŝĐ ĐŽƵŶƚĞƌƉĂƌƚƐ͘

print books. When librarians identify a print book in their collections that is also available electronically, they move the hard copy into off-campus storage, Seaman said. “Books simply take up a lot of space,” he said.

“There’s something about the physical text being in my hands, feeling the actual page I’m reading between my fingers, the satisfaction at closing a text when I’m finished with it, that cannot be replicated by holding a pad in my hands,” Kevin Zhang ’16 said.

Students share cultural experiences Six fraternites extend bids FROM FORUM PAGE 1

Dartmouth students visited the Dandelion Middle School in rural Beijing. The group worked with teachers to improve students’ English skills and better prepare them for college entrance exams. “It was a transfor mational experience for me to see the huge inequality that exists within China,” she said. “When we visited the students’ homes, we were shocked to see these kids, who were so grateful for our help, living in the middle of wastelands without water or a heating system.” Dickey Center student programs officer Amy Newcomb said that organizors chose to host the forum on Martin Luther King Jr. Day after realizing that there was no structured activity specifically aimed to attract students during the day, Newcomb said. “With Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s values of global citizenship and deliberate reflection on our actions, we thought it would be appropriate to launch the forum on MLK Day,” she said. Every fall, the event’s planning committee solicits student proposals about cross-cultural experiences in the U.S. and elsewhere. After reviewing submissions, the committee attempts to identify common threads among proposals and urges some students to collaborate under a shared theme to produce a final, joint presentation.

In the process, students work with a faculty moderator whose research focus often aligns with their own experiences. Kate Bradshaw ’14, who worked with two other students on a presentation about global health in Peru, Rwanda and Tibet, said she enjoyed sharing her experience conducting a survey about pesticide

͞tŚĞŶ ǁĞ ǀŝƐŝƚĞĚ ƚŚĞ ƐƚƵĚĞŶƚƐ͛ ŚŽŵĞƐ͕ ǁĞ ǁĞƌĞ ƐŚŽĐŬĞĚ ƚŽ ƐĞĞ ƚŚĞƐĞ ŬŝĚƐ͕ ǁŚŽ ǁĞƌĞ ƐŽ ŐƌĂƚĞĨƵů ĨŽƌ ŽƵƌ ŚĞůƉ͕ ůŝǀŝŶŐ ŝŶ ƚŚĞ ŵŝĚĚůĞ ŽĨ ǁĂƐƚĞůĂŶĚƐ ǁŝƚŚŽƵƚ ǁĂƚĞƌ Žƌ Ă ŚĞĂƟŶŐ ƐLJƐƚĞŵ͘͟ ͳ D Zz W E' ͛ϭϱ use in Peru’s Mala Valley. Bradshaw carried out the research project after participating in last winter’s Global Health Case Competition, which tasks teams of students with generating solutions to a complex global health problem.

Kaila Pedersen ’14, who presented about volunteering in the field of education, said she concentrated on how the nongovernmental organization hosting her internship in Bosnia and Herzegovina employed peer-to-peer learning in some of its programs. Bonita Chen ’16, who attended the event, said she found the forum’s timing to be appropriate, as the presentations enabled students to learn more about other cultures and broaden their viewpoints. “I just wish more people would come to these events, and perhaps particularly those who are not from multicultural backgrounds,” Chen said. Rockefeller Center program officer Vincent Mack, who cochaired the forum with Savage, said he appreciates the fact that students recognize the privilege they have in enjoying learning opportunities outside the classroom and are willing to share their experiences. Several College offices, including the Tucker Foundation, Rockefeller Center and Office of OffCampus Programs, collaborated to organize the forum, Newcomb said.

weekend, said that although he felt indecisive in the fall, he had Harry Gates ’14, the president a better sense of which fraternity of Zete, said this year’s numbers he wanted to join this term. Williams said the process of are consistent with those of past winters. Last winter, Zete extended rushing aligned with his expectaseven bids to the nine men that tions, which he based on the experiences of friends who completed rushed. Of the men who shook out fall recruitment. “You had instant access through on Friday at Sig Ep, about half had been off-campus or had cho- them to see what the frats are like, and that helps sen not to join you decide,” a frater nity in he said. the fall, Connor ͞/ƚ ǁĂƐ Ă ŐƌĞĂƚ ĐŚĂŶĐĞ WilWatumull ’14, ƚŽ ŐĞƚ ƚŽ ŬŶŽǁ ŵŽƌĞ liams said he the president of ŐƵLJƐ ŽŶ ĐĂŵƉƵƐ͘͟ chose Sig Nu Sig Ep, said. because he “We were very as friends happy with the ͳ KEEKZ t dhDh>> ͛ϭϰ͕ w with many of turnout,” he said. “Whether we ac- WZ ^/ Ed K& ^/'D W,/ the brothers in the house. cepted the guys W^/>KE &Z d ZE/dz Luis or not, it was a Martinez ’16, great chance to who also acget to know more cepted a Sig guys on campus.” After an unusually high number Nu bid, said he had not originally of men participated in Chi Gam’s planned on rushing this winter. rush this term, the fraternity ex- After becoming more involved with tended more bids than it has in past the fraternity, he later changed his winters, president Nicholas Allen mind. The smaller group of men who ’14 said. In January 2013, Chi Gam gained three new members. participate in winter recruitment Winter recruitment numbers appealed to him, as opposed to the tend to be significantly lower than large crowds that rush during the those of the fall term. Approxi- fall, he said. “I chose the house that I chose mately 350 men accepted bids during fall rush in both 2012 and because I felt very comfortable there,” Martinez said. “I felt that 2013. Latrell Williams ’16, who ac- they were nice people and shared cepted a bid from Sig Nu this similar interests.” FROM RUSH PAGE 1


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Contributing Columnist Joseph Geller ’16

Contributing Columnist Kyle Bigley ’17

Healthy Competition

Addressing Atheism

džͲÇ€Ä‚ĆŒĆ?Ĺ?ƚLJ ĂƚŚůĞƚĞĆ? Ć?ĹšŽƾůÄš Ä?ŽŜĆ&#x;ŜƾÄž ƚŽ Ä?Äž Ä‚ĹŻĹŻĹ˝Ç ÄžÄš ƚŽ ƉůĂLJ Ĺ?ĹśĆšĆŒÄ‚žƾĆŒÄ‚ĹŻĆ?͘ Each year, the National Intramural- basketballs players are less than thrilled Recreational Sports Association weighs in that they must compete against a squad on not letting former varsity athletes play of ex-Division I basketball players. This in club sports. A rule permits each club year’s team boasts three former Dartmouth team to have as many former varsity players varsity basketball players, and, in its differas they want, providing they only played ent incarnations, Lob City has proven to be varsity for one season. formidable. The team While the rule has recently picked up a not been changed, the “Former  Big  Green  varsity  graduate student with question of whether athletes  should  be  allowed  to  four years of varsity or not former varsity Ä?ŽŜĆ&#x;ŜƾÄž ƚŽ ƉůĂLJ Ĺ?ĹśĆšĆŒÄ‚žƾĆŒÄ‚ĹŻ experience and two players should be al- Ć?Ć‰Ĺ˝ĆŒĆšĆ?͘ tĹšÄžĆŒÄž ĞůĆ?Äž Ç Ĺ˝ĆľĹŻÄš ƚŚĞLJ freshmen on the club lowed to play in club ƉůĂLJ Ĺ?Ĩ ƚŚĞLJ Ç ÄžĆŒÄž ŜŽĆš Ä‚ĹŻĹŻĹ˝Ç ÄžÄš basketball team. tournaments should ƚŽ Ć‰Ä‚ĆŒĆ&#x;Ä?Ĺ?ƉĂƚĞ Ĺ?Ĺś Ĺ?ĹśĆšĆŒÄ‚žƾĆŒÄ‚ĹŻ However, Lob be reaffirmed on a leagues?â€? City didn’t ultimately smaller scale, in the win last year, and context of the Colwhile they may be lege’s intramural sports. considered favorites to bring home the Former Big Green varsity athletes should title this year, nothing is guaranteed (as be allowed to continue to play intramural evidenced by the team’s collapse in last sports. Where else would they play if they year’s final against Alpha Delta fraternity’s were not allowed to participate in intramu- team). ral leagues? Dartmouth is a small school Intramural sports should be enjoyable in a small town, and there are no other and competitive. There are other exleagues available to these players. varsity players scattered throughout the At the College, as long as a player did league in addition to multiple club players, not play varsity for the season in question, and this diversity of skill lends to a more he or she is eligible to play in intramural competitive game for all involved. Not all games. I am not at all bothered by allow- intramural teams play in the same league, ing ex-varsity players to and by participating compete in intramural in less competitive sports. Many of them Íž ůƚŚŽƾĹ?Ĺš / ŚŽƉĞ ƚŚĂƚ Ć?ÄžÇ€ÄžĆŒÄ‚ĹŻ brackets, teams with are past their prime and ŽĨ >Ĺ˝Ä? Ĺ?ƚLJ͛Ć? Ć‰ĹŻÄ‚Ç‡ÄžĆŒĆ? Ç Ĺ?ĹŻĹŻ ŚĂǀĞ little-to-no basketnot in as good shape as Ä?ŽŜŇĹ?Ä?ĆšĆ? Ä?Ä‚ĆľĆ?Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ƚŚĞž ƚŽ ĹľĹ?Ć?Ć? ball experience can they were when they the  game  against  my  own  hold their own withwere varsity athletes. ƚĞĂž͕ / ŚĂǀĞ ŜŽ Ć‰ĆŒĹ˝Ä?ůĞž Ç Ĺ?ƚŚ out being crushed. But many intramural ƚŚĞž ƉůĂLJĹ?ĹśĹ? Ĺ?Ĺś Ĺ?ĹśĆšĆŒÄ‚žƾĆŒÄ‚ĹŻ Although I players would prefer Ĺ?ĂžĞĆ?͘Í&#x; hope that several of that these athletes do Lob City’s players not play, as they have will have conflicts a distinct advantage over those who have causing them to miss the game against my never played a varsity sport and just want own team, I have no problem with them to play for fun. playing in intramural games at the College. This question resurfaced this past And if anything, I am excited about our weekend, regarding intramural basketball match against Lob City — the team presents and a team of ex-varsity players who call a challenge. Nothing worthwhile is easy, themselves Lob City. Many intramural and intramural sports are no exception.

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LINDSAY ELLIS, (GLWRU LQ &KLHI STEPHANIE MCFEETERS, Executive Editor

CARLA LARIN, Publisher MICHAEL RIORDAN, Executive Editor

TAYLOR MALMSHEIMER, Day Managing Editor MADISON PAULY, Evening Managing Editor PRODUCTION EDITORS KATIE MCKAY, Opinion Editor LORELEI YANG, Opinion Editor BRETT DRUCKER, Sports Editor BLAZE JOEL, Sports Editor ASHLEY ULRICH, Arts & Entertainment Editor

SASHA DUDDING, Evening Managing Editor BUSINESS DIRECTORS PIOTR DORMUS, Finance & Strategy Director ELIZABETH MCNALLY, Design Director JASMINE XU, Technology Director GARDINER KREGLOW, Advertising Director

ERIN LANDAU, Mirror Editor MARINA SHKURATOV, Mirror Editor ADITI KIRTIKAR, Dartbeat Editor EMMA MOLEY, Dartbeat Editor TRACY WANG, Photography Editor ALEX BECKER, Multimedia Editor

ISSUE

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH OPINION

NEWS EDITOR: Jessica Avitabile and Iris Liu, LAYOUT EDITOR: Sean Cann, COPY EDITOR: Kimberly Mei.

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ƚŚĞĹ?Ć?ĆšĆ? Ä‚ĆŒÄž Ä‚Ĺś ƾŜÄšÄžĆŒĆŒÄžĆ‰ĆŒÄžĆ?ĞŜƚĞĚ ĹľÄžĆŒĹ?Ä?Ä‚Ĺś ĚĞžŽĹ?ĆŒÄ‚Ć‰ĹšĹ?Ä?͘ Former Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), faUW][Ta \PM Ă…Z[\ KWVOZM[[XMZ[WV \W ^WT]V\IZQTa come out as gay, came out for a second time, J]\ WVTa IN\MZ PM VW TWVOMZ PMTL X]JTQK WNĂ…KM This second time, however, he said he was an atheist. Frank’s hesitation points to the long-untapped potential for the political mobilization of the irreligious. Atheists, agnostics and non-belivers, while yet to experience the same kind of political and social awakening as other oppressed groups, can potentially create a formidable bloc in American politics. *]ZV\ QV \PM Ă…ZM[ WN \PM 1VY]Q[Q\QWV KWVdemned to die in Adolf Hitler’s Germany, atheists continue to experience discrimination in the United States. In fact, seven states — Arkansas, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas — ban atheists from holding public WNĂ…KM QV \PMQZ [\I\M KWV[\Q\]\QWV[ IXXIZMV\Ta QV direct contradiction to the First Amendment. Atheists can challenge the religious right’s encroachments on First Amendment freedom. Secularism, one hallmark of both Lockean liberalism and the Constitution, bars the government from giving preferential treatment to I [XMKQĂ…K ZMTQOQW][ OZW]X )[ \PM ZQOP\ X][PM[ for the state to endorse Christianity, this proud tradition has increasingly faced assault. Atheists constitute a rapidly expanding silent minority. Atheism is commonly recogVQbML I[ \PM NI[\M[\ OZW_QVO ZMTQOQW][ INĂ…TQItion, or lack thereof, in American society. In some polls, atheists, agnostics and nonbelievers account for nearly 20 percent of the U.S. population, outnumbering the percentage of Jews in America. However, while the 113th Congress includes 34 Jewish members, it has no atheists or non-believers. In fact, only one openly atheist representative — former Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.) — has ever served in Congress. I believe minorities should continue to push for proper representation in government. Diversity is the lifeblood of America. In this same vein, atheists, agnostics and nonbelievers should simply have greater representation

than 0 percent of Congress. Their growing numbers could eventually force legislators to acknowledge their existence and needs. As atheists and agnostics gain political power, they also can lend their voices to ad^WKI\M NWZ KI][M[ TQSM I[ SMMXQVO [KQMV\QĂ…K M^Wlution in the classroom and keeping religion out of secular government. Since the rise of evangelical Christians within the Republican Party, Christian groups have engaged in a long campaign to project their morals and beliefs upon what should be secular government — as demonstrated by attacks on evolution in the classroom, abortion and gay rights. This even fails to include the annual holiday frenzy of religious fanaticism, when the right launches into harangues about the war on Christmas. Indeed, some religious advocates have even spewed historical revisionism in the preposterous claim that the founding fathers, who were mainly deists, intended America to be a Christian nation. To win the battle over scrutinizing the founding fathers’ intentions regarding church and state, secularists need allies to lend their voices against those of the American right-wing extremists. While atheists and agnostics should not impose their beliefs on anyone else, they can function as allies. Atheists and agnostics can work with other voters, both religious and non-religious, who believe that there should be a clear barrier between church and state. The religious right will continue to try to erode this barrier, especially as right-wing media pays close attention to the so-called “culture warsâ€? in which liberals want to make America into a “godlessâ€? society. If we as a society truly believe that American citizens should not be compelled to follow a certain belief system, it is absolutely necessary to separate government and religion, and unifying atheists as a voting bloc will help protect and ensure that separation. More atheist representation in Congress will allow America to remain faithful to the First Amendment, which is crucial to protect citizens’ freedoms and government integrity.


TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

PAGE 5

THE DARTMOUTH NEWS

Federal investigators Quinones talks journalism experience to visit campus Jan. 27 FROM MLK PAGE 1

FROM TITLE IX PAGE 1

on campus later this month, and we hope and expect community members who are interested in speaking with them will do so.” Investigators will return to Hanover in February, according to the Office for Civil Rights. The Department of Education initiated an investigation of the College for possible Title IX violations last May, seeking to evaluate the College’s response to sexual harassment claims and its grievance procedures. Occidental College professor Caroline Heldman, a co-founder of End Rape on Campus who led a Title IX complaint against Occidental in April 2013, said that Dartmouth’s case is unique because the investigation was initiated by the Department of Education, not an individual complaint. “In this particular case, I would be curious to know how they are deciding who to speak to,” Heldman said. “Since there isn’t a complaint file, they will be certainly speaking with administrators who have authority over cases.” In May 2013, more than 30 Dartmouth students and alumni alleged Clery Act violations of sexual assault, hate crimes, bullying, hazing and gender-based, racial and religious discrimination. The Clery Act requires institutions of higher education to disclose information regarding campus crime. Susy Struble ’93, founder of the nonprofit activist organization Dartmouth Change, said the decision to hold open office hours at the College acknowledges the problem of sexual assault and makes clear that an authority is willing to listen. She said the government-driven investigation draws greater attention to problems the College has struggled with for decades. “The OCR recognizes that the systemic issues at Dartmouth are deeply seated, institutionalized and make it very difficult for the people who see the problem to feel comfortable speaking out,” she said. Activist Andrea Pino, a complainant in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Title

IX case who has helped students nationwide file federal complaints against their institutions, said addressing sexual assault is a complex task. “It’s a systematic problem because students of color and students of queer identity don’t feel like they can talk about it,” Pino said. “I hope a lot of Dartmouth students will come forward, but I don’t know how acceptable it will be.” Struble said she was concerned by the fact that the College chose to inform campus of the investigators’ visit through a Dartmouth Daily Updates email, a passwordprotected message distributed at 1 a.m. Heldman said that in most Title IX investigations, complainants publicize the investigators’ visit to campus. At Occidental, the complainants created Facebook groups and announced the investigators’ visit via email. The standard process for Title IX investigations begins with external research, in which the Office for Civil Rights collects information about the institution. In some cases, the investigators schedule a campus visit, typically within a month or two of launching the investigation. Once on campus, the investigators speak to both those who lodged the complaint and to school administrators listed in the complaint. Campus officials that are not named in the complaints may also be asked to provide relevant information. Student involvement in investigations varies. At Occidental, for example, investigators offered forums that allowed any interested individuals to speak with them privately. Heldman said campus visits are an essential component of investigations because in-person conversations convey more nuances than documents can. “Oftentimes, complainants don’t necessarily know what is a violation of the federal law,” Heldman said. “Investigators speaking to them can determine the extent which the law has or has not been violated in a way that layperson can’t.”

for using protest at Dartmouth to affect change, saying that College programming has failed to address issues involving race, sexual assault and the fraternity system, among others. Toward the end of his remarks, Bishop asked audience members to rise from their seats. “Stand if sitting is no longer an option, stand if you understand that we must eradicate white supremacy,” he said. With the audience on its feet, Bishop invited crowd members to join him on stage as he continued to speak. After another five minutes,

“Stand if sitting is no longer an option, stand if you understand that we must eradicate white supremacy.” ͳ : >/> /^,KW ͛ϭϰ some audience members returned to their seats, while others congregated at the Top of the Hop to listen to brief speeches expressing dissatisfaction with the current campus climate and calling students to action. Meanwhile, inside the auditorium, Quinones began to speak. He described his childhood in San Antonio, where he supported his family of migrant farmers by shining shoes in dive bars at night. From an early age, Quinones said he was interested in journalism because there were so few Latino news anchors on television.

Although his speech did not address the protest, Quinones said in an interview with The Dartmouth that he admired the students’ effort and the College’s willingness to let the protest occur. “It says a lot about this university that they were allowed to go onstage and get their message out,” he said. “There are other places where they could have been arrested or pulled off the stage or something ridiculous like that. I hope people will hear and listen and that somehow there’s a conversation that’s started.” His speech credited the government programs that grew out of King’s activism and the Civil Rights era, such as Upward Bound, with helping him graduate from college and journalism school. As a journalist, his Latino heritage helped him cover stories in South America, one of which catapulted him from a job as a regular news correspondent in New York to a host for “Primetime: What Would You Do?” Following Quinones’ conclusion, protesters handed out sheets titled “Resources for Allyship,” containing a list of left-leaning websites and authors as well as the email address of The Dartmouth Radical, which did not organize the protest. In an interview after the speech, Hanlon defended his record of receptiveness to student concerns and vowed to engage in discussion with the protesters. “Since I’ve been here I’ve gone out of my way to listen to students and talk to students, I think that’s pretty well documented,” he said. “They clearly have something they’re very passionate about, and I’m happy to talk to them, too.”

Students who attended the speech expressed approval of the protest mixed with concern that the protesters did not lay out a clear plan of action for affecting the change they wish to see. “I was proud of the people who went up on stage and the fact that [social activism] exists on campus,” Perri Haser ’17 said. “When I came to school here I actually felt like that might not be the case.” Freya Jamison ’17 said she was unsure if College policy would change as a result of the protest. In addition to the keynote address, College programming for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

͞/ƚ ƐĂLJƐ Ă ůŽƚ ĂďŽƵƚ ƚŚŝƐ university that they were allowed to go onstage and get their message out.” ͳ :K,E Yh/EKE ^ included an employee breakfast, a play session hosted by Dartmouth Alliance for Children of Color and a quilting marathon. Quilts made by the volunteers were sent to Lutheran World Relief, which will distribute them to refugees around the world. At 5 p.m., members of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, led by history professor Russell Rickford, made the annual Candlelight vigil procession from Cutter-Shabazz Hall to the Hopkins Center. Throughout the day, an hourlong video of King’s 1962 speech at the College was playing on repeat in Dartmouth Hall.

dZ z t E'/THE DARTMOUTH SENIOR STAFF

History professor Russell Rickford and members of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity lead a candlelight vigil.


PAGE 6

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH COMICS

DARTMOUTH EVENTS

DŽƵďůĞ ^ĞĐƌĞƚ WƌŽďĂƟŽŶ

Ryan Gallagher ’16

TODAY 12:30 p.m.

“Decoding the Visual Grid in the Works of Andrew Forge, Charles Spurrier and Beryal Korot,” Hood Museum of Art

4:15 p.m.

͞ ĞƚĞĐƟŶŐ DĂůǁĂƌĞ ǁŝƚŚ ŽĚĞ E ͕͟ ƌ͘ ŝĐŬŝĞ 'ĞŽƌŐĞ ĂŶĚ ƌ͘ DĂƌ-­‐ garent Lospinuso of Johns Hopkins University, Steele 006

4:15 p.m.

͞dŚĞ ůĞŵĞŶƚĂƌLJ &ŽƌŵƐ ŽĨ ZĞůŝŐŝŽŶ ŝŶ DŽĚĞƌŶŝƚLJ͕͟ EĂŶĐLJ >ĞǀĞŶĞ ŽĨ Yale University, Thornton 105

TOMORROW 3:00 p.m.

͞dŝůƞĂĐƚŽƌ KƉĞŶ ^ƚƵĚŝŽ͗ dŚĞ ^ĐŝĞŶĐĞ ŽĨ WůĂLJ͕͟ ůĂĐŬ &ĂŵŝůLJ sŝƐƵĂů ƌƚƐ ĞŶƚĞƌ͕ ϮŶĚ &ůŽŽƌ ŝŐŝƚĂů ,ƵŵĂŶŝƟĞƐ ^ƵŝƚĞ

4:15 p.m.

Computer science colloquium talk, “ Topic Models for Historical ZĞƐĞĂƌĐŚ͕͟ ƌ͘ ůůĞŶ ZŝĚĚĞůů͕ ^ƚĞĞůĞ ϬϬϲ

4:30 p.m.

͞dŚĞ WƵƌƐƵŝƚ ŽĨ ,ĂƉƉŝŶĞƐƐ͕͟ ǁŝƚŚ ĂƌŽů 'ƌĂŚĂŵ͕ &ŝůĞŶĞ ƵĚŝƚŽ-­‐ rium RELEASE DATE– Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

ACROSS 1 Speeder’s undoing 6 TiVo ancestor 9 Wherewithal 14 Erie Canal city 15 Letters for debtors 16 Big name in computer chips 17 Sighting in the Scottish Highlands 20 Accident scene fig. 21 Gallop or canter 22 “By Jove!” 23 Cream of the crop 24 Like plugs vis-àvis outlets 25 Using only ones and zeros 28 __-cheap: for a song 29 Recipe amt. 32 Air freshener targets 33 Sighting in Douglas, Wyoming 35 Belgrade citizen 36 Singer Horne and actress Olin 37 Continental coin 38 Sighting in the Pacific Northwest 40 Grammy winner Carpenter 41 Pub brew 42 Christie’s “Death on the __” 43 Large crowds 44 Mani’s salon gowith 45 Uncovered 46 Find a new table for 49 Gaucho’s weapon 50 “__ the season ...” 53 One studying this puzzle’s sightings 56 “Je __, donc je suis”: Descartes 57 Corn unit 58 Shade of green from Ireland 59 Promotional ploy 60 Skid row affliction 61 Lauder of cosmetics DOWN 1 Run the kingdom 2 Electron home

3 Webster’s, e.g.: 30 Binge 44 Coke competitor Abbr. 31 Lowly laborers 45 Churlish types 4 Essen 33 Beijing-born 46 Sales slip: Abbr. exclamation martial arts actor 47 “... __ saw Elba” 5 Madison Square 34 Apartment 48 “Auld Lang __” Garden hockey contract 49 Tub toy team 36 Stopped the ship, 50 Pinball foul 6 Drop in on in nautical lingo 51 __ of Wight 7 What you pay 39 Still on the plate 52 Eye sore 8 Piña colada 40 Bar sing-along 54 Last letter, in liquor 43 Expanse near Leeds 9 Konica __: the Capitol, with 55 Some Japanese “the” refrigerators conglomerate 10 Happen next ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 11 Business letter abbr. 12 On a __-to-know basis 13 Camera types, for short 18 “A snap!” 19 Missouri range 23 Potato chip flavor, briefly 24 Prophet whose name sounds like a mineral 25 __ nova: Brazilian music genre 26 Exemplary 27 Viking language 28 Hula or hora 29 Travels with the band 01/21/14 xwordeditor@aol.com

ADVERTISING For advertising information, please call (603) 646-2600 or email info@thedartmouth. com. The advertising deadline is noon, two days before publication. We reserve the right to refuse any advertisement. Opinions expressed in advertisements do not necessarily reflect those of The Dartmouth, Inc. or its officers, employees and agents. The Dartmouth, Inc. is a nonprofit corporation chartered in the state of New Hampshire. USPS 148-540 ISSN 01999931

By David Poole (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

01/21/14


TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

STUDENT SPOTLIGHT B y rebecca asoulin dŚĞ ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ ^ƚĂī

Michelle Khare ’14 has a film fanatic or animation buff’s dream resume. Khare, a digital media and technology major at the College, is currently in Los Angeles on the film studies Foreign Studies Program, where she is interning in the office of actor Steve Carell. In the past, Khare has worked in the marketing departments for Google and DreamWorks Studios and interned for Chris Sanders, who directed “The Croods” (2013), nominated for best animated feature film in the 2014 Academy Awards. What stirred your interest in animation? MK: When I came to Dartmouth, I had no idea I wanted to do something like this. I didn’t even know we had visual arts classes. Growing up, movies have always been my favorite thing. Not just feature films, but everything that encompasses media, including animated movies and short films. It’s especially interesting now that visual culture is much more prevalent in society. I am interested in the advent of different types of electronic media and how they affect our daily lives. How would you describe your major? MK: It’s basically a blend of digital arts, film, philosophy and English. I wanted to make a custom major after taking computer science professor Lorie Loeb’s 3D digital modeling class. She’s an amazing professor. She teaches you Maya, which is the industry standard software for animated movies and a very cool skill to have. What skills did you gain working at DreamWorks? MK: It was a really good way to get a taste of what working in the industry is like on a day-to-day basis. I loved it because at Dartmouth we do projects and write papers, but in an internship, you can see how your work is applied to a real product. It’s especially great to work for a movie I care a lot about, like “The Croods.” The director, Sanders, is famous for directing “Lilo and Stitch” (2002) and “How to Train Your Dragon” (2010). “Lilo and Stitch” is my favorite movie ever. It was a huge honor to be able to work in his office. What was your reaction when you first met Sanders? MK: I went up to him, and I told him that “Lilo and Stitch” was my favorite Disney movie. Growing up, everyone had a Disney princess that they related to. Someone might be like, “I’m blond, so Cinderella is my Disney princess” or “I’m a brunette, and Belle is my Disney princess.” For me, Lilo was my princess even though she’s not really a princess.

PAGE 7

THE DARTMOUTH ARTS

I’m half Indian, and I didn’t have a generic princess to refer to based on my hair color, except for Jasmine. I’m not even Hawaiian. I just feel like I relate to her a lot, being different. I also loved the story, which I think is really heartfelt and cute. I appreciate how Sanders’s movies don’t remind you of this fairy tale, generic plot line. They are all outrageous and so relatable. Who else could have ever thought of the idea for “Lilo and Stitch,” where a little alien comes down to earth and befriends a little Hawaiian girl? It’s so weird, and it works so well. How has Dartmouth fostered your future career? MK: I think the most beneficial thing for me has been finding supportive professors. Loeb has been really supportive of me when I was trying to get several different internships, and engineering professor Peter Robbie taught a class that was absolutely phenomenal. The D-Plan has also been a blessing. I was off three out of four quarters last year, and I was still able to travel on the FSP this winter as a senior. What advice would you give to younger students who are interested in internships or careers in animation? MK: If there’s something that you really want to do, use every available resource that you have to make it happen. That can include calling people you don’t know or using the alumni network. I was nervous emailing alumni, because I didn’t want to bother them. You kind of have to say to yourself, “I’m taking a chance. The worst thing that happens is nothing.” Also, if you don’t see a major you like, find a way to make your own. I pretty much sat down, found all the classes that I loved and found a way to make that my major.

Michelle Khare ’14

DŝĐŚĞůůĞ <ŚĂƌĞ ͛ϭϰ ŝƐ Ă ĚŝŐŝƚĂů ŵĞĚŝĂ ĂŶĚ ƚĞĐŚŶŽůŽŐLJ ŵĂũŽƌ ŝŶƚĞƌĞƐƚĞĚ ŝŶ Į ůŵ ĂŶĚ ĂŶŝŵĂƟ ŽŶ͘ Why do you make art? MK: Throughout high school I was involved in theater and films, and I worked at my town’s independent film center. That was my whole life. I came to Dartmouth from this really small town in Louisiana, and I thought to myself that everyone here was way smarter then me and that I needed to buckle down. I need to major in something that’s relevant, go into government or work on Wall Street so that I can have my 2.2 kids and a house. When I tried to do that, it was an absolute failure. I did fine in my classes, but I wasn’t having any fun. Now, I’ve accepted that animation is what I love to do and that I can make it practical. I don’t think that I’m going to move to California and

instantly become a huge star, but I believe if you find something you love and put all of your energy into it, you will be able to do it well. I don’t now if that will actually work out for me, but it worked out for Mindy Kaling ’01, and she is kind of my idol. We’re both Indian and attended Dartmouth. She’s a phenomenal writer and actress. I can only hope to be as funny as she is.

Courtesy of Michelle Khare

the final word My essential winter gear: move to California. That’s what I’ve done ever y winter. If I could travel anywhere: New Zealand during the winter, which is their summer, so that I could ride my bike. I’m on the cycling team at Dartmouth, and part of why I love California is that I am able to train outside.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

HOPKINS CENTER FOR THE ARTS

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PAGE 8

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH ARTS

Exhibit features artists-in-residence Sprint the marathon: a look toward the Oscars

developed as an actor. The best actor and best supdŚĞ ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ ^ƚĂī por ting actress categories are, It’s the most wonderful time however, ver y different stories. of the year. Not weather-wise, of Once the front-runner in a stacked course. I’m talking about awards race, Chiwetel Ejiofor’s perforseason. Although the Golden mance in “12 Years a Slave” may no Globe Awards and Screen Actors longer be the Academy’s favorite. Guild Awards are already behind My leaning is that Matthew Mcus, an abundance of other awards Conaughey’s portrayal of an AIDS shows in Februar y and March victim in “Dallas Buyers Club” — the Grammy Awards, British (2013) will take the prize. If there were any justice in the Academy Film Awards, Golden Raspberr y Awards and, of course, world, June Squibb would win the Academy Awards — are reason best supporting actress for her enough to huddle inside with hot show-stealing per formance in chocolate, popcorn and a mock-up “Nebraska” (2013). Instead, she will likely have to settle for a nomiballot sheet. The 2014 Academy Awards nation, as front-runners Lupita nominees were announced at 5:30 Nyong’o of “12 Years a Slave” and a.m. on Thursday, so by the time Jennifer Lawrence of “American I woke up, there were already Hustle” duke it out for the prize. full analysis ar ticles published Nyong’o was nominated for her on film and media websites. The heartbreaking turn as an abused nominees included a number of slave in “12 Years a Slave,” while front-runners for best picture and Lawrence plays an unpredictable, director, while the acting catego- heavy-drinking young wife to con ries appear to be more competitive. man Christian Bale in “American The coveted best picture prize Hustle.” As you may be able to tell, I do included some baf fling nominees, as the 45-car pileup known not like “American Hustle.” While the full explaas “Amerination would c a n H u s t l e ” “Given that a lot of take a few pag(2013) manes and another aged to make ĞdžĐĞůůĞŶƚ ĮůŵƐ ŶĞǀĞƌ ar ticle, I find the cut. The ǁŝŶ Žƌ ĞǀĞŶ ƌĞĐĞŝǀĞ it a mediocre race, however, film filled with will most likely ŶŽŵŝŶĂƟŽŶƐ͕ ƉĞŽƉůĞ actors whom come down to ŽŌĞŶ ĂƐŬ ǁŚLJ ǁĞ ƐŚŽƵůĚ Academy the two most ĐĂƌĞ ĂďŽƵƚ ƐƵĐŚ ĂǁĂƌĚƐ͘ the loves and wishtalked about es to reward, films of the /͛Ě ĂƌŐƵĞ͕ ŚŽǁĞǀĞƌ͕ ƚŚĂƚ danger ous year, “12 Years ƚŚĞLJ ƐĞƌǀĞ Ă ƉƵƌƉŽƐĞ Ͷ acombination. a Slave” (2013) It did not deand “Gravity” ƚŚĞLJ ŐƌĂŶƚ ůĞŐŝƟŵĂĐLJ ƚŽ ser ve to earn (2013). TheƚŚĞ ǁŝŶŶĞƌƐ͘͟ 10 nominam a t i c a l l y, tions, putting these films are as different as night and day — it in the same league as “Gravity,” the former breaks new ground in which also received 10 nods, and racial discourse, while the latter “12 Years a Slave,” with nine. Given that many excellent films is a technological triumph. Either never win or even receive nomiwould make a worthy winner. The best director field will nations, people often ask why we likely be competitive between should care about such awards. I’d these same films, though I think argue, however, that they ser ve a Alfonso Cuaron’s amazing visual purpose — they grant legitimacy achievements in “Gravity” will to the winners. The fact that there make him the winner over Steve is only one Academy to choose the victors limits the prizes, although McQueen. As far as the nominations for the selection process is also influactors, there are a number of clear enced by greed and petty politics. In one glaring example, the favorites. Cate Blanchett’s performance in “Blue Jasmine” (2013) little-known film “Alone Yet Not and Jared Leto’s role in “Dallas Alone” (2013) received a nominaBuyers Club” (2013) make the tion for best original song, beatbest actress and best supporting ing out original songs by Taylor actor categories almost foregone Swift, Coldplay and Lana Del Rey. conclusions. I was pleased to see The number in “Alone Yet Not Jonah Hill nominated for his ab- Alone” was composed by Bruce solutely bonkers performance in Broughton, a former governor “The Wolf of Wall Street” (2013), of the Academy’s music branch, although I doubt he will win the so one cannot help but speculate little golden man this year. In “The that he schmoozed his way to a Wolf of Wall Street,” Hill is hubris seat at the glitzy event. Hopefully and selfishness personified, and such politicking does not mar the the role shows how much he has ceremony, as it has in the past.

B y VARUN BHUCHAR

E d >/ Ed s /THE DARTMOUTH STAFF

:ŽƐĞ ůĞŵĞŶƚĞ KƌŽnjĐŽ ƉĂŝŶƚĞĚ ŚŝƐ ͞dŚĞ ƉŝĐ ŽĨ ŵĞƌŝĐĂŶ ŝǀŝůŝnjĂƟŽŶ͟ ĂƐ ĂŶ ŝŶͲƌĞƐŝĚĞŶĐĞ ĂƌƟƐƚ ŝŶ ƚŚĞ ϭϵϯϬƐ͘ six on-campus venues to exhibit work, including gallery space in the Hood, His dilated black pupils glare at view- Black Family Visual Arts Center and ers, seemingly daring them to continue Hopkins Center. The artists, ranging staring while asking “Did I give you from sculptors to architects, come from permission to look?” Composed from various locations. heavy strokes of black, brown, gray “We had a decision to make fairly and red, Carlos Sanchez’s eyes remain early on, which was do you stick with just as haunting in his “Self-Portrait” as the greats, or are you going to be when the artist first painted the work inclusive and show the range of the in 1923 as a Dartmouth student. program?” Taylor said. “We went with Almost 100 years later, work by the latter.” Dartmouth’s first artist-in-residence The exhibit includes work in progreturns to campus as part of the Hood ress, like Orozco’s sketches for his Museum’s “In Residence: Contem- mural, and finished work by artists of porary Artists at Dartmouth” show, considerable international fame like which opened Saturday. Although Frank Stella, who was at the forefront Sanchez died in 1998, previous Hood of abstract art in the 1960s. More intern Jessica Womack ’14 was able to recent work includes a piece by John contact the artist’s family in Guatemala Newman, the 2013 artist-in-residence, in 2012, and the museum negotiated for who used the Thayer School of Enthe acquisition of two of his works — gineering’s 3D printer to generate a the self-portrait and “Young Man with piece of vacuum-formed translucent Bird,” painted in Plexiglas to top 1932 while the arthis sculpture titled ist was in residence ͞tŚĞŶ / ĐĂŵĞ ƚŽ “Blue Light Holds at the College. the Distance.” The ĂƌƚŵŽƵƚŚ͕ ƚŚŝƐ The gift of gallery seamlessly the two paintings ǁĂƐ ƚŚĞ ĞdžŚŝďŝƟŽŶ / blends new works sparked the idea ĚƌĞĂŵĞĚ ŽĨ ĚŽŝŶŐ͘͟ like his with more for a full retrotraditional works, spective gallery. positioning NewFeaturing over 80 ͳ ,KK /Z dKZ man’s sculpture artists, the exhibit just feet from celpays homage to D/ , > d z>KZ ebrated Britishthe breadth and based ceramicist diversity of the Magdalene Odun83-year-old artist-in-residence pro- do’s traditional terracotta vases. gram, which invites renowned artists to Art is no longer simply a painting live on campus and create and exhibit on a wall, Taylor said, and must engage their work at Dartmouth. Artists also viewers in various ways, like through interact with students and faculty and sculpture and feats of modern engioften leave their marks on campus in neering. notable ways, such as Jose Clemente The success of Dartmouth’s artistOrozco’s “The Epic of American Civili- in-residence program stems from zation” mural in Baker Library’s lower the quality and number of resources level. that campus offers, Jerry Auten said, Hood director Michael Taylor artist-in-residence program director called this exhibit one of the largest and and co-curator of the exhibit. While most ambitious shows that the Hood artists once came to use Dartmouth’s has ever attempted. The show will use cutting-edge printmaking technology,

B y apoorva dixit

they now come for technology like 3D printing. The exhibit also highlights significant events in Dartmouth history. It includes work by 1971 artist-in-residence Alexander Brooks Jackson, the first African-American artist selected for the program, and 1973 artist-in-residence Fritz Scholder, the program’s first Native American artist. Jackson’s “Man and the Wall #7” hangs opposite Scholder’s “Dartmouth Portrait #17,” painted while in residence at the College. Scholder’s painting glorifies the Native American against a Dartmouth Green background. The man holds an eagle-wing feather fan, a symbol of spiritual harmony to oppose the stereotypical warrior image. The work reflects the tension between President John Kemeny’s 1970 reaffirmation of the College’s commitment to Native American education and athletic teams’ unofficial use of the Indian as their mascot. This theme of using art to reveal and overcome racial and national struggles is also apparent in Christopher Cozier’s installation piece, “Cross Currents,” which is currently displayed in the Hop’s Jaffe-Friede Gallery. A reflection on global capitalism’s negative effect on his home of Trinidad, the piece consists of 300 white flags arranged in a triangle formation. The flags are printed with two images, a businessman with a briefcase sprinting to the right and a runaway slave with a bundle over his shoulder running to the left. Taylor said that the exhibition is overdue but required considerable preparation. “When I came to Dartmouth, this was the exhibition I dreamed of doing,” he said. The gallery reception for the exhibit will take place Friday and include a conversation with 2004 artist-in-residence architect James Cutler in the Loew Auditorium at 4:30 p.m. The show will be on display through July 6.


TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH SPORTS

PAGE 9

Men’s hockey goes 0-1-1 at home vs. Colgate and Cornell

B y josh schiefelbein dŚĞ Ä‚ĆŒĆšžŽƾƚŚ ^ƚĂč

This weekend, the Big Green men (3-13-3, 2-9-1 ECAC) battled Colgate University and No. 12 Cornell University in two tough, physical matchups, losing 4-1 on Friday to the Raiders ! -+)+ JMNWZM Ă…OP\QVO to a draw on Saturday against the Big Red (9-4-4, 5-3-3 ECAC).

DARTMOUTH

1

COLGATE Â Â

4

DARTMOUTH

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CORNELL

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Dartmouth played physical against Colgate, matching body check for body check well into the third before shifting to an aggressive, high-energy unit against Cornell. Colgate entered Friday’s game after an impressive three-game stretch that included playing No. 1 Minnesota University to a 2-2 draw only to win the ensuing shootout 2-1, blanking then No. 2 Ferris State University 3-0 to win the Mariucci Classic in Minneapolis and edging by then No. 18 Vermont 3-2. The streak propelled the Raiders into the receiving votes category in the most recent USCHO

Poll. Colgate outmuscled Dartmouth in the 4-1 win, but the Big Green was no pushover. Penalties and missed opportunities, including an inability to score on the power play, proved to be Dartmouth’s undoing. The Big Green went scoreless in three chances on the man advantage while the Raiders cashed in on two of their four opportunities. “We played against a good hockey team that was really quick and we played really hard,â€? head coach Bob Gaudet said. “I’ve never been one to tolerate lazy or retaliatory penalties. Would we like to give them less opportunities? Yes.â€? Dartmouth struck first in the contest when Brandon McNally ’15 TQ\ \PM TIUX _Q\P " TMN\ QV \PM Ă…Z[\ period. McNally gathered a rebound IVL ÆQKSML \PM X]KS XI[\ NZM[PUIV goalie Charlie Finn and into the net. The goal was McNally’s third of the [MI[WV IVL PQ[ Ă…Z[\ [QVKM 6W^ IOIQV[\ Princeton, ending a 10-game goalless streak. Dartmouth didn’t have a chance to build its lead as Colgate tied the game 27 seconds later with a snipe from freshman Andrew Black. With four minutes remaining in the period, McNally was sent to the penalty box for high-sticking. Colgate sophomore Mike Borkowski broke the tie with 21 seconds left in the

JULIETTA Â GERVASE/THE Â DARTMOUTH Â STAFF

After  a  tough  loss  against  Colgate,  the  Big  Green  fought  hard  against  Cornell.

JULIETTA Â GERVASE/THE Â DARTMOUTH Â STAFF

ŽŜŜŽĆŒ ĞžƉĆ?ĞLJ Í›ϭϲ Ć?Ä?Ĺ˝ĆŒÄžÄš ĹšĹ?Ć? ÄŽĆŒĆ?Ćš Ä?ŽůůÄžĹ?Ĺ?ĂƚĞ Ĺ?ŽĂů ŽŜ ^Ä‚ĆšĆľĆŒÄšÄ‚Ç‡ ĹśĹ?Ĺ?Śƚ Ĺ?Ĺś Ä‚ ϭͲϭ Ć&#x;Äž Ä‚Ĺ?Ä‚Ĺ?ĹśĆ?Ćš Ĺ˝ĆŒĹśÄžĹŻĹŻ Ä‚Ćš dĹšŽžĆ‰Ć?ŽŜ ĆŒÄžĹśÄ‚Í˜

power play. Borkowski’s goal was his seventh this season, giving him a team-leading 20 points as well as giving Colgate a 2-1 lead. Immediately following a Colgate power play late in the second, junior Spiro Goulakos was called for boarding Brad Schierhorn ’16. One minute later, sophomore Darcy Murphy was sent to the box for charging, allowing Dartmouth to play 5-on-3 for 64 seconds. Unfortunately, Dartmouth couldn’t capitalize, despite a shot that ricocheted off the crossbar and a couple other scoring chances. The second period ended goalless, and the score remained 2-1. Colgate freshman Brett Corkey was sent off for tripping with 30 seconds to play in the second, so the Big Green started the third on the power play. 2][\ [MKWVL[ QV\W \PM Ă…VIT NZIUM Josh Hartley ’17 was sent to the box for charging. Eight seconds into 4-on4 hockey, sophomore Ryan Johnston for the Raiders scored on a wrist shot from the right side, giving Colgate a 3-1 lead. ,IZ\UW]\P MIZVML I Ă…N\P \ZQX \W the penalty box when Nick Lovejoy ’14 was penalized for high-sticking. Goulakos scored 59 seconds into the power play with a blast from the left side, extending Colgate’s lead to \PZMM IVL LMÆI\QVO \PM I\UW[XPMZM QV <PWUX[WV )ZMVI <PM Ă…VIT UQV]\M[ ticked away, and the Big Green could not pull off the miracle comeback, exiting Thompson at the short end of a 4-1 defeat. “You know you’re going to get hit,â€? Connor Dempsey ’16 said. “You just gotta support each other and take care of the puck. We were not happy with the way we played [against Colgate]. We knew it was a new day, and everyone was pretty positive and looking

forward to getting on the ice [against Cornell].â€? Dartmouth hoped to rebound the following night against Cornell, who had lost only one game in its last 10 and defeated Harvard University 3-2 the previous night on the back of two late period goals. The game ended in a 1-1 tie and was the sixth overtime game in the last 10 meetings between the two teams. Rick Pinkston ’15 and Charles Grant ’16 were given the evening off. Brandon Kirk ’17 was inserted in place of Pinkston while James Kruger ’16 made his third career start in goal IVL PQ[ Ă…Z[\ [QVKM WXMVQVO VQOP\ IOIQV[\ Princeton. Dartmouth’s defense played strong all night, ripping shots on the offensive end and helping Kruger by using their bodies to block Cornell’s shot attempts. Cornell tried to match Dartmouth’s aggression, but Dartmouth dominated QV ITT J]\ \PM Ă…VIT [KWZM <PM *QO /ZMMV won the shot contest 33-24. “[Dartmouth] played very well,â€? Cornell coach Mike Schafer said. “I thought they outplayed us. They did a great job and they were the better hockey team tonight.â€? +WZVMTT [\Z]KS Ă…Z[\ R][\ " QV\W the game when senior Dustin Mowrey snuck the puck through Kruger’s legs on his own rebound. Originally, 3Z]OMZ LMÆMK\ML 5W_ZMaÂź[ Ă…Z[\ [PW\ but could not cover or clear the puck. Dartmouth went on the offensive as soon as the second period started. Dartmouth even set up an excellent opportunity for a game-tying goal, but a shot by Eric Neiley ’15 ricocheted off the crossbar, clanging loudly throughout Thompson as the crowd groaned. Immediately after the shot, Dartmouth enjoyed two consecutive power plays but was unable to score either time. Cornell almost scored on a wrap-

around by sophomore Christian Hilbrich, but Kruger kicked it away in time. Hilbrich’s miss would come back to haunt Cornell as Dempsey sent Thompson into an uproar with an equalizer 40 seconds later. Tim 7Âź*ZQMV Âź Ă…ZML WNN I [PW\ \PI\ [MVQWZ OWITQM )VLa 1TM[ LMÆMK\ML <PM puck didn’t leave the crease. Dempsey SVWKSML \PM X]KS QV NWZ PQ[ Ă…Z[\ KWTlegiate goal. “I just happened to be in the right spot at the right time,â€? Dempsey said. “O’Brien was screening in front, and I saw him. I just found an open area and the puck just wound up going to me, and it was an open net.â€? Most of the third period played out like the end of the second until Hilbrich, hero of the previous night’s Harvard game, was sent to the penalty box for two minutes after an interference call with 2:38 left in regulation. ,IZ\UW]\P WV Q\[ Ă…N\P XW_MZ XTIa WN the night, couldn’t score and the game went into overtime. Neither team scored in overtime despite several opportunities on each side. Just as the buzzer sounded, tempers between both teams exploded. Neiley checked a Cornell player skating back to his bench, causing a brawl between the players on the ice. No customary end-of-game hand[PISM WKK]ZZML I[ WNĂ…KQIT[ UW^ML \W OM\ both teams off the ice and into their locker rooms as soon as possible. Neiley was also suspended from playing in next week’s game. “It was just a great college hockey game,â€? Gaudet said. “The guys are disappointed we didn’t win, but we did everything we could. I thought we _MZM Ă…MZKM Âş Next weekend, Dartmouth travels to Troy, N.Y., to play Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Friday night at 7 p.m. In their November matchup, RPI won 7-1.


PAGE 10

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH SPORTS

Basketball teams face stiff competition on the road over weekend FROM BASKETBALL PAGE 12

WN \PM Ă…Z[\ J]\ \PM \PZQTTQVO [MKWVL half changed the pace. The visitors KIUM W]\ Ă…ZQVO I[ :WTIVL PQ\ I Y]QKS X]TT ]X R]UXMZ IVL ;bIJW [XTI[PML I \PZMM \W M`\MVL \PM \MIUÂź[ advantage to eight. NJIT’s Shakia Robinson seemed to take the early Z]V XMZ[WVITTa IVL M`IK\ML PMZ revenge in the paint, powering her way to the cup for eight points in seven minutes and tying the score at 28. 621< [MQbML I TMIL UQL_Ia through the period, and Dartmouth would not be in front again until the 2:20 mark, when Roland drained a two-pointer after pulling down a rebound on the defensive end and Z]VVQVO \PM ÆWWZ PMZ[MTN <PM *QO /ZMMV PMTL I VIZZW_ TMIL _Q\P R][\ " TMN\ 6MQ\PMZ team could score again until the 1:07 mark, when NJIT took the lead again on a three-pointer from R]VQWZ ,MVQ[I ,WUQ\MZW^I There was little doubt in anyone’s mind whose hands the ball would MVL ]X QV NWZ \PM Ă…VIT [PW\ ,M[XQ\M I ZW]OP [PWW\QVO VQOP\ ;bIJWÂź[ [WTQL performance all season long meant [PM PIL \PM OZMMV TQOP\ QV \PM Ă…VIT moments. šC;bIJWEÂź[ JMMV KWV[Q[\MV\ NZWU the three-point line and from the

Ă…MTL NWZ I TW\ WN \PM [MI[WV Âş [IQL Micir. “Even when she’s not having a good game, we always believe that PMZ VM`\ WVM Q[ OWQVO QV Âş ;bIJW ZMKMQ^ML \PM QVJW]VL[ XI[[ at the top of the key, and her long bomb sailed into the twine, sending \PM JMVKP QV\W I NZMVba NJIT tried to close the gap with smart fouls and a quick layup, but Dartmouth’s shooters did not miss at the charity stripe down the stretch, I[ )JJMa ;KPUQ\\ Âź PQ\ \PM Ă…VIT two free throws to put the game away. The men’s loss to St. John’s was its fourth in a row, dropping the JIN  LEE/THE  DARTMOUTH  STAFF team to a 7-8 overall record. Women’s  b asketball  d efeated  N JIT  i n  a  o ne-­â€?possession  game  on  the  road. Despite the team’s skid going into the contest, center Cole Harrison ’17 said the team believed it had a Ă…Z[\ XW[[M[[QWV <PM :ML ;\WZU two three-pointers in two minutes chance against a St. John’s squad left little time for celebration as it to give Dartmouth a 20-21 lead. St. John’s pulled away toward \PI\ PIL TW[\ Ă…^M [\ZIQOP\ IVL PIL _MV\ WV I [M^MV XWQV\ Z]V Ă…VQ[PML barely pulled out a win against WNN Ja I TWVO JITT NZWU R]VQWZ 8PQT \PM MVL WN \PM PITN J]\ )TM` 5Q\WTI ’16 found his stroke from deep. First Columbia earlier in the season. Greene IV. “We knew how they had played Gabas Maldunas ’15 swooped in he hit a three to bring the score to against Columbia,â€? Harrison said. for a layup to stop the bleeding, but “We knew that they had some bad the Red Storm continued to press circumstances as a team this year, its advantage, stretching the score so we had a very good chance of \W ! PITN_Ia \PZW]OP \PM Ă…Z[\ coming in and being really success- period. ful against them.â€? The Big Green pulled close The Big Green came out with to the Red Storm on a series of KWVĂ…LMVKM IVL XTIaML IV M`KMTTMV\ [UWW\P R]UXMZ[ 5ITL]VI[ UILM Ă…Z[\ PITN 2WPV /WTLMV Âź [M\ \PM a two-pointer, then Malik Gill ’16 tone early, nailing a three on the showed impressive range, swishing B y Jake bayer

35-31, and then he drained a 30NWW\ XZIaMZ I[ \PM PITN\QUM J]bbMZ sounded to keep Dartmouth within NW]Z I\ The Big Green’s level of play dropped precipitously in the second half, as things quickly became ugly for the visitors. A Greene threepointer sparked a huge 28-11 run for the home team, as Dartmouth posted an anemic 26.7 percent from \PM Ă…MTL QV \PM [MKWVL PITN <PM game seemed decided almost from \PM [\IZ\ WN \PM Ă…VIT XMZQWL ¸ \PM Big Green failed to put a single point on the board for four minutes. /]IZL <aTMZ 5MT^QTTM Âź [IQL despite the recent string of Big Green losses, the team is trying to UIQV\IQV Q\[ KWVĂ…LMVKM OWQVO QV\W I LQNĂ…K]T\ OI]V\TM\ WN 1^a 4MIO]M opponents. Both teams will take on Har^IZL =VQ^MZ[Q\a VM`\ _MMSMVL \PM women in Cambridge and the men ZM\]ZVQVO \W 4MMLM )ZMVI

Skiing takes second place at Colby Carnival

slalom with a time of 1:30.25. <PM _WUMVÂź[ ITXQVM \MIU Ă…VQ[PML dŚĞ Ä‚ĆŒĆšžŽƾƚŚ ^ƚĂč third in both the slalom and giant slaThe skiing team earned its second TWU 7V \PM Ă…Z[\ LIa QV \PM OQIV\ [TITWU KWV[MK]\Q^M [MKWVL XTIKM Ă…VQ[P I\ \PM Abby Fucigna ’15 came in second, Colby College Winter Carnival this Ă…VQ[PQVO R][\ ]VLMZ \PZMM \MV\P[ WN I weekend with a deep performance, second ahead of the third-place skiier Ă…VQ[PQVO \WX \PZMM QV ITT MQOP\ [KWZQVO from Colby. races. 130 points short of the UniThe weather complicated the teams’ versity of Vermont’s 1012 points, the training, Fucigna said. Big Green locked up second place by <PM \WX Ă…VQ[PMZ WV \PM [MKWVL LIa a comfortable 200 point margin over in the slalom for the Dartmouth women Middlebury College. _I[ 5IQ[QM 1LM Âź _PW Ă…VQ[PML Ă…N\P Conditions varied throughout the with a combined time of 1:37.52. Sara weekend, ranging from ice to fog to 3QS]\ Âź IT[W Ă…VQ[PML \P QV \PM M^MV\ snow, producing a rough surface, _PQTM .]KQOVI Ă…VQ[PML \P men’s alpine skiDarting head coach mouth’s tradi“The  snow  was  really  icy  Peter Dodge said. tionally strong The alpine and  bumpy,  and  it  was  Nordic team also team compet- ÄšĹ?ÄŤÄžĆŒÄžĹśĆš ĨĆŒŽž ĆŒƾŜ ƚŽ ĆŒƾŜ͘Í&#x; had a good showing at Sugarloaf ing at the carniNIKML LQNĂ…K]T\QM[ Íł , K , ,/W <E/',d val. due to the weathAnnie er, head coach 0IZ\ Âź \WWS [MKChip Knight said. “The snow was really ond in the Nordic 10K freestyle, coming icy and bumpy, and it was different from within 12 seconds of the leader from run to run.â€? \PM +I\IUW]V\[ 0IZ\ IT[W Ă…VQ[PML The temperamental weather also second in the 5K classic, 19.9 seconds led to the shortening of the nordic races behind a skier from UVM. Four other on Saturday. *QO /ZMMV [SQMZ[ Ă…VQ[PML QV \PM \WX The men’s alpine team came out of the 10K and three others placed in with a strong performance at this car- the 5K. nival despite the unfriendly conditions. The one event that a Dartmouth Robert Overing ’16 turned in a top-10 skier won outright was the men’s 10K Ă…VQ[P QV JW\P M^MV\[ Ă…VQ[PQVO [Q`\P QV classic. Silas Talbot ’15 dominated the OQIV\ [TITWU IVL Ă…N\P QV [TITWU WVM WN Ă…MTL Ă…VQ[PQVO [MKWVL[ IPMIL WN the highlight performances for Dodge. the second-place skier from UVM. In Sam Macomber ’16, who was the 15K freestyle race, Patrick Caldwell KWUXM\QVO QV PQ[ Ă…Z[\ KIZVQ^IT Ă…VQ[PML Âź Ă…VQ[PML QV [MKWVL I UQV]\M JMPQVL seventh in slalom. the Catamount leader. Dylan Brooks ’17 also grabbed a The team hits the road for the UNH \WX Ă…VQ[P KWUXTM\QVO \PM UMVÂź[ +IZVQ^IT VM`\ _MMSMVL


TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH SPORTS

PAGE 11

Men’s tennis dominates non-conference play on Saturday

B y hayden aldredge

The men’s tennis team dominated on Saturday, handily defeating Bryant University and Villanova University in a morning-afternoon doubleheader. Both competitions ended 7-0, marking the second time in the past three seasons the Big Green has swept its opening weekend. The team dropped only one set

DARTMOUTH

7

BRYANT Â Â

0

DARTMOUTH

7

VILLANOVA Â

0

over the weekend. The doubles teams did not even need to complete play against Bryant because the result of the match was already determined. In the ]VÅVQ[PML UI\KP *ZIVLWV ,M*W\ Ÿ IVL ,W^aLI[ ;ISQVQ[ Ÿ TML The No. 1 doubles team, Cameron Ghorbani ’14 and Brendan TannenJI]U Ÿ _I[ ^QK\WZQW][ QV JW\P matches they played, dropping just three games. Sakinis and DeBot also defeated the Wildcats’ second team <PM \PQZL \IVLMU[ KPIVOML NWZ the Big Green, with Sam Todd ’15 IVL -ZQS 6WZLIPT Ÿ LMNMI\QVO \PM

*]TTLWO[Âź L]W IVL ,QMOW 8MLZIbI ’17 and Chris Kipouras ’15 dispatching \PM ?QTLKI\[Âź \MIU The Big Green was just as dominant in singles. The team won all six matches against Bryant. Dartmouth lost just one set against Villanova and cruised through their other matches in straight sets. There were a few straight set victories for the Big Green. Sakinis took his dominant form into singles, where he defeated a Villanova senior Thomas O’Brien in two quick sets, only losing three games. Two freshmen got in on the action, recording easy victories against both opponents. George Wall Âź IVL 8MLZIbI JW\P _WV QV [\ZIQOP\ sets. Wall defeated Bryant freshman 5I` >WO\ _PQTM 8MLZIbI _WV matches against both the Bulldogs and Wildcats, dropping four games in each match. š1\ _I[ ZMITTa OZMI\ \W Ă…VITTa OM\ out there and compete,â€? Wall said. “Obviously I’m happy about the result, but it’s great to be back playing some competitive tennis.â€? The spectators basked in the Big Green’s success. Multiple members of the team mentioned how big of a role \PM NIV[ XTIaML QV Ă…ZQVO ]X \PM I\PTM\M[ “The support today from teammates and the rowdy crowd really assisted our performance,â€? Justin

+PIV Âź [IQL The Big Green won eight out of nine matches against Villanova in straight [M\[ <WLL LZWXXML \PM Ă…Z[\ [M\ WN PQ[ match against Villanova before rallying JIKS \W _QV \PM VM`\ \_W [M\[ š1\ LMĂ…VQ\MTa X]UXML M^MZaWVM ]X Âş Wall said. It was a convincing and quick victory

for the young team, which only has two seniors this year. Four freshmen play [QOVQĂ…KIV\ ZWTM[ WV \PM \MIU “We’re thrilled to start the season Âş 3QXW]ZI[ [IQL š?MÂźZM TWWSQVO to build on this great start.â€? Both victories will boost the team’s KWVĂ…LMVKM OWQVO QV\W VM`\ _MMSMVL when the Big Green will to hit the

road. The team is traveling to Stillwater, Okla., to visit Oklahoma State University, where the Big Green will square off against the Cowboys and the University of Arkansas Razorbacks. The next matches at home will be the weekend of Jan. 31 and Feb. 1 against East Tennessee State University and Radford University.

NATALIE Â CANTAVE/THE Â DARTMOUTH Â STAFF

DĞŜ͛Ć? ƚĞŜŜĹ?Ć? Ĺ?Žƚ Ĺ?ĆšĆ? Ç Ĺ?ĹśĆšÄžĆŒ Ć?ĞĂĆ?ŽŜ Žč ƚŽ Ä‚ Ĺ?ŽŽÄš Ć?ĆšÄ‚ĆŒĆšÍ• ĹŻĹ˝Ć?Ĺ?ĹśĹ? ŽŜůLJ ŽŜÄž Ć?Ğƚ Ä‚Ĺ?Ä‚Ĺ?ĹśĆ?Ćš ĆŒÇ‡Ä‚ĹśĆš ĂŜĚ sĹ?ĹŻĹŻÄ‚ŜŽÇ€Ä‚ Ä‚Ćš ĹšŽžÄžÍ˜

Women’s hockey falls to Cornell, then beats Colgate on the road FROM W HOCKEY PAGE 12

a pretty great power play unit, so actually our penalty kill did a good job.â€? Dartmouth was then called for two consecutive penalties, which kept the team from developing rhythm. “It’s hard to get anything going when every few minutes we’re [\WXXQVO IVL Q\Âź[ Ă…^M WV \PZMM \PMV four-on-three,â€? Ratty said. “It’s not something we’re used to playing, so we’re kind of just improvising.â€? The third of these penalties, an interference call against Emma Korbs ’17, proved to be deadly for the Big Green, as Cornell sophomore Taylor Woods put one past Holdcroft for the 1-0 lead. Dartmouth committed one more penalty in the frame as Sam Zeiss ’15 was sent off for interference. The Big Red committed two penalties at the end of the frame, but the Big Green could not capitalize, despite nearly 1:10 of 5-on-3 hockey. “The first period was pretty rough,â€? Ratty said, “but in the second and third period we stuck more to our systems, we were a little more intense, and we got after it a little more.â€? About halfway through the second, Woods tallied her second of \PM OIUM <PM Ă…Z[\ UQV]\M[ WN the third saw 10 penalties combined,

but neither team could capitalize on the chances. With under four minutes left, sophomore Jess Brown tallied the Big Red’s third goal of the game. ,IZ\UW]\P Ă…ZML [PW\[ WV VM\ _PQTM \PM *QO :ML Ă…ZML 0WTLKZWN\ Ă…VQ[PML \PM OIUM _Q\P [I^M[ WVM of her better games of the year. š,MĂ…VQ\MTa QV \PM Ă…Z[\ XMZQWL \PMa got a lot [of shots] through their power play chances,â€? Holdcroft said. “As the game went on we kind of OW\ QV\W I ZPa\PU <PMa LMĂ…VQ\MTa controlled the play a little bit more, but I think as the game progressed we kind of found our rhythm a bit.â€? Saturday evening’s game in Hamilton, N.Y., yielded a much better outcome for the Big Green _WUMV <PM ^QK\WZa W^MZ +WTOI\M came on the strength of a three-goal second period, boosting the team’s KWVĂ…LMVKM “We knew that Colgate was a team that we really needed to beat,â€? Ratty said. “We really came into the weekend wanting those two points NZWU +WTOI\M [W _M LMĂ…VQ\MTa LQLVÂź\ TM\ \PM Ă…Z[\ OWIT OM\ ][ LW_V Âş After allowing Colgate to score PITN_Ia \PZW]OP \PM Ă…Z[\ XMZQWL Dartmouth notched three consecutive second period goals by Ratty, Lauren Kelly ’14 and Lindsey Allen Âź 1V \PM UQLLTM NZIUM \PM *QO /ZMMV W]\[PW\ \PM :IQLMZ[ IVL

dominated every facet of the game. š1V \PM Ă…Z[\ XMZQWL _M LQL PI^M opportunities to score, but we were getting the gritty goals, being tough and getting the second chance,â€? head coach Mark Hudak said. “I think all three goals were off rebounds. It was just good hard work in front of the net IVL Ă…VQ[PQVO WV \PM [MKWVL KPIVKM[ That was the big difference.â€? Ratty put the Big Green on the board about six minutes in to the frame off of assists from Ali Winkel ’14 and Karlee Odland ’15. Six UQV]\M[ TI\MZ 3MTTa Ă…ZML PWUM I XI[[ from Allen. With under a minute to go in the period, Allen scored off of I[[Q[\[ NZWU 4I]ZI ;\IKMa Âź IVL +I\PMZQVM *MZOP]Q[ Âź Colgate managed to sneak a goal in at the beginning of the third period, but it couldn’t keep up the momentum. The Big Green kept Colgate out of the net for the rest of the game and sealed the victory with I NW]Z\P OWIT _Q\P R][\ [MKWVL[ WN play remaining. Stacey notched her second of the season on an empty net while on the power play. Even though Dartmouth gave up six power plays, it killed all of them, continuing to play tough and smart defense. “It’s all about discipline and knowing where you’re supposed to be and how to play each situation,â€?

Ratty said. “We’re pretty good at it, [W _MÂźZM XZM\\a KWVĂ…LMV\ OWQVO QV\W the penalty kill.â€? The team also picked its offense back up after a less-than-stellar display on Friday; Dartmouth had 34 shots on goal in the winning effort. “We were going into Cornell hoping we could maybe steal a game,â€? Holdcroft said. “With Colgate we felt it would be a really gritty game, they’re a pretty tough team, they

play a pretty gritty style, so I think _M SVM_ Q\ _I[ I OIUM _M LMÅVQ\MTa could win, but we knew it would be a close game.� With the up-and-down trip to New York in the books, Dartmouth is now preparing for two home games IOIQV[\ :MV[[MTIMZ 8WTa\MKPVQK 1V[\Qtute on Friday at 7 p.m. and Union College on Saturday at 4 p.m. The team lost to Union 3-0 before defeatQVO :81 MIZTQMZ \PQ[ [MI[WV

HUDDLE UP

KELSEY Â KITTELSEN/THE Â DARTMOUTH Â STAFF

dŚĞ ĆšĆŒÄ‚Ä?ĹŹ ĂŜĚ ĎĞůĚ ƚĞĂžĆ? Ć‰ĆŒÄžĆ‰Ä‚ĆŒÄžÄš ĨŽĆŒ ƚŚĞĹ?ĆŒ Ç ÄžÄžĹŹÄžĹśÄš ĆšĆŒĹ?ͲžÄžÄžĆšÍ˜


SPORTS

Basketball travels to tri-state area B y jasper bingham dŚĞ Ä‚ĆŒĆšžŽƾƚŚ ^ƚĂč

The Big Green men’s and _WUMVŸ[ JI[SM\JITT \MIU[ M`XMZQ MVKML UQ`ML ZM[]T\[ \PQ[ _MMSMVL I[ \PM _WUMV 1^a XQKSML ]X \PMQZ Å Z[\ ZWIL _QV IOIQV[\ \PM New Jersey Institute of Technology, 48-45, and the men (7-8, 0-1 Ivy) fell 69-55 to St. John’s University. Both games marked the teams’ last W]\[QLM \PM 1^a 4MIO]M \PQ[ [MI[WV The women’s win brought the \MIUŸ[ ZMKWZL \W JMNWZM Q\[ Å VIT JTWKS WN 1^a XTIa .WZ_IZL 4ISQV :WTIVL Ÿ _I[ LWUQVIV\ _Q\P

XWQV\[ IVL [M^MV ZMJW]VL[ WV 7-of-11 shooting, and freshman star .IVVQ ;bIJW Âź _I[ I SMa XTIaMZ for the Big Green, drilling a three

XTIa[ IVL \PM MVMZOa I\ _PQKP [PM XTIa[ IZM KWV\IOQW][ Âş _WUMVÂź[ assistant coach Addie Micir said. š;PM XTIa[ [W PIZL ¸ [PM OWM[ IN\MZ every loose ball, she’s a gamer, she _IV\[ \W _QV Âş NJIT 45 The contest was close from the start, as the game went through 12 DARTMOUTH  (W)  48 lead changes throughout the con\M[\ :WTIVL _I[ \PM KI\ITa[\ NWZ \PM ST. JOHN’S 69 Big Green out of the gate, scoring Q\[ Ă… Z[\ J]KSM\ TM[[ \PIV I UQV]\M DARTMOUTH  (M)  55 into the game and accounting for MQOP\ WN Q\[ Ă… Z[\ PITN XWQV\[ _Q\P ]VLMZ WVM UQV]\M TMN\ \W X]\ Dartmouth led 18-15 at the end the game on ice. SEE BASKETBALL PAGE 10 š<PM XIKM I\ _PQKP C:WTIVLE

Women’s hockey goes 1-1 on the road B y jehanna axelrod dŚĞ Ä‚ĆŒĆšžŽƾƚŚ ^ƚĂč

The women’s ice hockey team had an inconsistent weekend, falling to No. 2 Cornell University on Friday, then coming from behind to win against Colgate University on Saturday. The Big Green (5-13-1, 4-8-1 ECAC) was shut out against Cornell (14-2-3, 9-1-2 ECAC) 3-0. Dartmouth rallied from a one goal Å Z[\ XMZQWL LMÅ KQ\ \W JMI\ +WTOI\M 17-2, 2-10-0 ECAC) 4-2 on Saturday. .ZQLIaŸ[ OIUM [\IZ\ML WNN XWWZTa for the Big Green. Just 59 seconds QV\W \PM Å Z[\ XMZQWL \PM \MIU _I[

TUESDAY, JANUARY 21, 2014

THE DARTMOUTH SPORTS

PAGE 12

KITTML NWZ Q\[ Ă… Z[\ XMVIT\a I \_W UQV]\M UQVWZ NWZ \ZQXXQVO Ja 4QVL[Ma )TTMV Âź OQ^QVO +WZVMTT I XW_MZ XTIa

CORNELL

3

DARTMOUTH Â Â

0

COLGATE

2

DARTMOUTH Â

4

“We didn’t come out as strong as _M PIL PWXML Âş 3I\a :I\\a Âź [IQL š<PMa KIXQ\ITQbML WV W]Z UQ[\ISM[

IVL _M KW]TLVÂź\ X]\ \PM X]KS QV \PM VM\ Âş <PM *QO :ML LQL VW\ [KWZM WV \PQ[ IL^IV\IOM J]\ Q\ PMTXML [M\ \PM [\IOM NWZ I PMI^QTa XMVITQbML KWV\M[\ <PM \MIU[ KWUJQVML NWZ XMVIT\QM[ QV the game, the Big Green going 0-10 WV \PM XW_MZ XTIa _PQTM \PM PWUM team cashed in on one of its nine WXXWZ\]VQ\QM[ “Cornell is the kind of team you really don’t want to go short-handed IOIQV[\ Âş OWITQM IVL KW KIX\IQV 4QVL say Holdcroft ’14 said. “They’ve got SEE W HOCKEY PAGE 11

SAM Â DICHIARA/THE Â DARTMOUTH Â STAFF

dŚĞ Ç Ĺ˝ĹľÄžĹśÍ›Ć? ŚŽÄ?ŏĞLJ ƚĞĂž Ç Ä‚Ć? Ć?Śƾƚ ŽƾĆš Ä?LJ Ĺ˝ĆŒĹśÄžĹŻĹŻ Ä?ÄžĨŽĆŒÄž Ä?ÄžĆ?Ć&#x; ĹśĹ? ŽůĹ?ĂƚĞ ϰͲώ ŽŜ ƚŚĞ ĆŒĹ˝Ä‚Äš ĹŻÄ‚Ć?Ćš Ç ÄžÄžĹŹÄžĹśÄšÍ˜

TUESDAY LINEUP

No athletic events scheduled.

MORE THAN A GAME B y Maddie garcia and abby cohen dŚĞ Ä‚ĆŒĆšžŽƾƚŚ ^ƚĂč

At Dartmouth, where almost a Y]IZ\MZ WN \PM [\]LMV\ JWLa XIZ \QKQXI\M[ QV I ^IZ[Q\a [XWZ\ Z]UWZ[ WN I\PTM\QK XQXMTQVM[ IVL M`KT][Q^M athletes-only information sessions IZM QVĂ… VQ\M *]\ Q[ \PMZM IVa \Z]\P \W them? )[ [MVQWZ[ _M SVW_ Ă… Z[\PIVL \PM [\ZM[[ IVL \QUM QV^WT^ML QV Ă… VLQVO I job. For varsity athletes, the College runs the Dartmouth Peak PerforUIVKM XZWOZIU \W XZMXIZM \PMU \W transition from a life as a Division I I\PTM\M \W I _WZSQVO QV I XZWNM[[QWVIT setting. The Dartmouth Peak Performance +IZMMZ +WVVMK\QWV[ XZWOZIU I KWT TIJWZI\Q^M XZWRMK\ Z]V Ja \PM )\PTM\ QK[ ,MXIZ\UMV\ IVL \PM +MV\MZ NWZ 8ZWNM[[QWVIT ,M^MTWXUMV\ XZMXIZM[ athletes by encouraging them to evaluI\M N]\]ZM KIZMMZ WX\QWV[ <PM XZWOZIU MVKW]ZIOM[ I\PTM\M[ to work on their resumes, write cover TM\\MZ[ \ZI^MT NWZ WNN KIUX][ QV\MZ^QM_[ and make connections within athletic networks, said Donnie Brooks, assistant athletics director for Dartmouth Peak Performance. While the Center for Professional ,M^MTWXUMV\ PI[ IV IT]UVQ LI\IJI[M NWZ ITT WN KIUX][ *ZWWS[ [IQL \PM I\PTM\QK[ LMXIZ\UMV\ PI[ Q\[ W_V _Q\P W^MZ NWZUMZ *QO /ZMMV XTIaMZ[ š,IZ\UW]\P NWTS[ IZM KZIba IJW]\ ,IZ\UW]\P \PMZM [MMU[ \W JM XQ`QM L][\ QV \PM IQZ Âş *ZWWS[ [IQL MUXPI [QbQVO NWZUMZ I\PTM\M[Âź LM[QZM \W I[[Q[\ current students. <PW]OP Z]UWZ[ WN I XQXMTQVM NWZ I\PTM\M[ Æ WI\ IZW]VL KIUX][ \PM NIK\[ seem to tell a different story. š1\Âź[ VW\ I XQXMTQVM Q\Âź[ VM\_WZSQVO Âş [IQL KMV\MZ LQZMK\WZ :WOMZ ?WWT[Ma š)T]UVQ PI^M INĂ… VQ\QM[ NWZ LQNNMZMV\ \PQVO[ ;WUM PI^M IV INĂ… VQ\a NWZ \PMQZ /ZMMS PW][M [WUM PI^M IV INĂ… VQ\a NWZ I\PTM\QK[ IVL \PI\Âź[ I OWWL \PQVO Âş *ZWWS[ WZOIVQbM[ [Q` \W M^MV\[ I \MZU \PI\ KWVVMK\ MUXTWaMZ[ IVL student-athletes. Athletes’ schedules differ from those of most students, [W I\PTM\M [XMKQĂ… K VM\_WZSQVO M^MV\[ are scheduled at times that work best for them, like an 8 a.m. breakfast with

JPMorgan that we crashed. There were 55 student-athletes dressed in business attire, much like any other recruiting event, but unlike \PM KIUX][ _QLM QVNW [M[[QWV \PM JPMorgan breakfast with athletes was more interactive, with circles WN KPIQZ[ [M\ ]X [W I\\MVLMM[ KW]TL have discussions with associates IJW]\ LQNNMZMV\ I[XMK\[ WN _WZS I\ \PM Ă… ZU )VL \W \WX Q\ ITT WNN \PM _PWTM M^MV\ PIXXMVML JMNWZM UW[\ WN KIUX][ _I[ awake and after many of the athletes had an early morning lift session. <PM XZWOZIU[ \PI\ \PM +MV\MZ NWZ 8ZWNM[[QWVIT ,M^MTWXUMV\ WNNMZ \W I\P TM\M[ IZM [QUQTIZ \W Q\[ W\PMZ XZWOZIU[ [IQL 3I\M AMM I[[Q[\IV\ LQZMK\WZ WN \PM +MV\MZ NWZ 8ZWNM[[QWVIT ,M^MTWXUMV\ “It’s not that we favor one over the W\PMZ Âş [PM [IQL š?M IZM R][\ \ZaQVO \W IKKWUUWLI\M \PMQZ KZIba [KPML]TM[ Âş 7N\MV MUXTWaMZ[ VW\ \PM +WTTMOM IZZIVOM NWZ \PM M^MV\[ IVL [XMKQĂ… KITTa target athletes, Woolsey said. What is it about athletes that attract \PQ[ M`\ZI I\\MV\QWV NZWU MUXTWaMZ[' š<PMa SVW_ PW_ \W [XMVL TWVO PW]Z[ _WZS ]VLMZ \PM XZM[[]ZM WN time and they know how to learn from _QVVQVO IVL LMĂ… VQ\MTa NZWU TW[QVO Âş Brooks said. )\PTM\M[ IZM IT[W KWUXM\Q\Q^M LQ[ KQXTQVML JITIVKML IVL \MIU WZQMV\ML by nature, Woosley said, traits that š\ZIV[TI\M ^MZa _MTT QV\W IV WZOIVQbI \QWV Âş The job search is about marketing your skills, and for athletes this is about highlighting what distinguishes them from the student body. “When we work with athletes, we target the fact that there are very [XMKQĂ… K [SQTT[ IVL KWUXM\MVKQM[ \PI\ I\PTM\M[ PI^M \PI\ \PMa KIV XZW^QLM MUXTWaMZ[ Âş AMM [IQL Statistically, Brooks and Woolsey noted that the number of athletes that OM\ RWJ[ \PZW]OP KWZXWZI\M ZMKZ]Q\QVO Q[ [QUQTIZ \W \PM [\]LMV\ XWX]TI\QWV overall. ?PQTM \PMZM IZM XMWXTM WV KIUX][ _PW _WZS [XMKQĂ… KITTa \W PMTX I\PTM\M[ it’s not about giving them an advan\IOM I[ U]KP I[ \IXXQVO QV\W I VM\_WZS IVL [SQTT [M\ \PI\ \PMa ITZMILa XW[[M[[ by virtue of their status as Big Green athletes. Who can argue with that?


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