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The Dartmouth
December 20, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

ICC report examines minority recruitment

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The Inter-Community Council presented a report on diversity detailing the College's recruitment and retention rates of minority faculty members in an open meeting sponsored by the People's Coalition on April 30.




Sports

Sailing wins Northern Series 1 regatta in first home race

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The Dartmouth sailing team had mixed results this weekend, winning the Northern Series 1 competition, a home regatta at Mascoma Lake in Lebanon, N.H., and coming in fourth and fifth overall in the George Morris Trophy at Boston University and the Southern Series Seven at Salve Regina University, respectively. The Southern Series Seven presented cold and light conditions on Saturday.


Sports

One-on-One

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This week I decided to throw a little spin on the traditional one-on-one formula. Dartmouth always brags about the strength of its community, so I wanted to portray some of the school's legendary camaraderie.




Sports

Softball loses division in final series

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Four games behind the top team in the Ivy League North Division and with four games to play, the Dartmouth softball team competed in a pair of doubleheaders this weekend against division-leading Harvard University with the title on the line. The Big Green's slim hopes of forcing a tie in the standings were quickly shattered, however, as Harvard (34-14, 18-2 Ivy) took the first game of Saturday's doubleheader in Hanover, winning 8-1 to lock up the North Division crown.


News

Tuck hosts leadership conference

Tuck School of Business and the Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers partnered for the first time to host 40 of the nation's most esteemed executives in cable technology and operations, according to M.




05.02.11.News.TakeBackTheNight
News

Rally held to 'Take Back the Night'

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Gavin Huang / The Dartmouth Staff Students, administrators and community members shared concerns about sexual abuse even recounting personal experiences with sexual violence during Friday evening's annual "Take Back the Night." The event, meant to encourage prevention and raise awareness of sexual assault at the College, was held as part of the Sexual Abuse Awareness Program's observance of Sexual Assault Awareness month. Anneliese Sendax '13 delivered the evening's solemn keynote speech, in which she challenged observers to reconcile what she sees as the "two Dartmouths" of day and night. "We will be able to build a community in which no voice, no matter how quiet, is silenced," she said. Following the address, a crowd of approximately 70 people, including College President Jim Yong Kim, gathered in front of the Hopkins Center to begin a protest march across the campus, in conjunction with marches held on college and university campuses across the nation. Holding vivid signs with slogans such as "Awareness is Sexy" and "Claim our bodies, Claim our rights, Take a stand," the demonstrators marched past Collis, down Massachusetts Row and along Webster Avenue before circling around Baker-Berry Library and returning to the center of the Green.



Opinion

Short Answer

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Friday's Verbum Ultimum discussed student participation in sexual assault awareness events. How can we involve more students in conversations about preventing sexual assault, particularly those who are not typically engaged in such dialogues? Older students must set examples for underclassmen.


Sports

Any Given Monday

The sun was shining on Dartmouth baseball this weekend. After a cold start to the morning on Saturday at the annual Green and White football scrimmage, the day turned around by afternoon and a crowd gathered at Red Rolfe Field.


News

Daily Debriefing

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A recent Wall Street Journal column entitled, "Shutter Fraternities for Young Women's Good," is part of a larger trend of criticizing and evaluating fraternity culture and has gained recent national attention, Insider Higher Ed reported.