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(10/01/19 6:00am)
A diverse class of assets and positive private equity returns were key factors in the growth of the College’s endowment to an all-time high of $5.7 billion in the 2019 fiscal year. The endowment returned a net 7.5 percent, marking a small decrease from last fiscal year’s return of 12.2 percent.
(10/01/19 6:10am)
The Greek Leadership Council will no longer allocate funds for Greek organizations to host student performance groups, according to GLC president James Park ’20. The now-terminated funding policy used to provide $150 to Greek houses to host student performance groups, Park said.
(10/01/19 6:05am)
(09/30/19 2:08am)
The Big Green football team's offense was dominant against Colgate, scoring 38 points on 440 yards.
(09/30/19 2:05am)
Running back Zack Bair ’22 is brought down by two defenders during the Big Green's 38-3 win over Colgate on Saturday.
(09/30/19 2:02am)
The Big Green came back strong on Sunday to defeat UMass Lowell in overtime, 4-3.
(09/30/19 6:10am)
On Saturday, the field hockey team matched up against No. 10 Princeton University in its first game of Ivy League competition this season and walked away with a 4-0 loss. The next day, the Big Green responded in force with a 4-3 overtime win against the University of Massachusetts at Lowell.
(09/30/19 6:15am)
Football
(09/30/19 6:05am)
On a bright Saturday morning after tough races against Yale University and Boston University, the rowing community at Dartmouth gathered for the dedication of a newly-improved team facility: the Friends of Dartmouth Rowing Boathouse. Presided over by Dartmouth’s director of athletics, Harry Sheehy, the ceremony was centered around appreciation for those alumni who built the program and made these renovations possible, as well as the opportunities it opens for the future leaders of Dartmouth rowing.
(09/30/19 6:00am)
Week 4 of the NFL season has just come to a close and like last year, there are some teams in the league that, for all intents and purposes, are starting to phone it in and look toward the 2020 NFL draft. I wrote about this last year and some of the players I wrote about have looked like I expected (Deebo Samuel with the San Francisco 49ers) while some have looked worse than expected (Greg Little with the Carolina Panthers). Let’s take a deep dive.
(09/30/19 6:20am)
Quarterback Jared Gerbino ’20 posted career highs in passing yards and touchdowns and the Big Green defense dominated as Dartmouth cruised to a 38-3 win over Colgate University on Saturday.
(09/27/19 3:40am)
Residents of French Hall set up mousetraps as they deal with rodents in the building.
(09/27/19 3:18am)
A mouse trap is set up in French Hall as residents deal with a mice infestation.
(09/27/19 6:00am)
On Tuesday, the men’s soccer team lost 4-2 to the State University of New York at Albany Great Danes. Despite a second-half comeback, the Big Green was unable to remedy its scoreless first half and come out with a win on the road.
(09/27/19 1:15am)
The campus group Movement Against Violence recently announced that its programming was being absorbed into the Sexual Violence Prevention Project.
(09/27/19 6:15am)
The campus group Movement Against Violence announced on Wednesday that its programming is being absorbed into the Sexual Violence Prevention Project, with MAV no longer “existing in name.”
(09/27/19 1:04am)
The former house of Sig Ep fraternity will be occupied by residents of the Thought Project LLC this school year.
(09/27/19 1:00am)
Holcombe was director of Dartmouth's Teacher Education program from 2011 to 2014.
(09/27/19 6:00am)
Rebecca Holcombe, a former education instructor at Dartmouth, announced her candidacy this July for governor of Vermont in the 2020 election. Holcombe, a Democrat, grew up in Afghanistan, the Fiji Islands, Pakistan and Sudan with parents who worked for the United Nations. While she began her education overseas, she completed her high school and college education in the United States, later receiving a doctorate in education leadership, policy and practice from Harvard’s Graduate School of Education. She is a former teacher, principal and administrator for the Rivendell School District in New Hampshire, and she served as director of Dartmouth’s Teacher Education program from 2011 until 2014. In 2014, she was appointed as Vermont’s secretary of education, a position she held until 2018, when she resigned due to policy differences with Gov. Phil Scott (R). She currently lives in Norwich, VT with her family.
(09/27/19 6:05am)
Unlike most residents in Dartmouth’s living learning communities, upperclassmen residents of the Thought Project Living Learning Community moved into a locale a little different from the McLaughlin cluster this fall: 11 Webster Avenue, the former house of Sigma Phi Epsilon, a fraternity de-recognized by the College in 2018.