Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism.
The Dartmouth
December 18, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
Sports

Chuckwagon rides off into the sunset

|

As the NBA season comes to a close, I'm getting excited for the playoffs. Although it's not the same without Michael Jordan and the Bulls entering the field, I can deal with watching Shaq, Kobe, and ex-Bulls coach Phil Jackson leading the Lakers and Vince Carter, the next Jordan, leading the Toronto Raptors. Note: Michael Jordan and the Bulls did not appear in last year's playoffs, but last year's abbreviated season wasn't nearly the same as a regular NBA season, so discard it. Jordan is, however, not the only thing that will be missing from this year's playoffs.



Sports

For the love of the game

|

Call me a baseball purist -- call me what you will. I don't necessarily think that the designated hitter is the absolute worst idea in the world.


Sports

Men's lacrosse falls to Eli, 10-4

|

Sophomore Brian Hunt, who was just named to the Ivy honor roll after a 12-point performance in two games last week, scored four more to help Yale rout Dartmouth 10-4 for its fourth consecutive win yesterday afternoon in Hanover. The Bulldogs have now won 42 of the 70 match-ups between the two teams, including the last five in a row. From the opening whistle, it was apparent that the Big Green was off its game.


Opinion

Our Time

|

Ours is a generation characterized by apathy. Particularly at Dartmouth, where we find ourselves availed with numerous opportunities for success.



News

Current SA leaders content; candidates remain unsure

|

The statements released by the Trustees and Dean of the College James Larimore were met with a lack of surprise by the leadership of the Student Assembly and members of the Student Response Task Force yesterday. These student leaders expressed general agreement with the announcements and said that they had great hopes for improvements to the social and residential future of the College -- but many disagreed with specific changes that now will be made to the Greek system. "Nothing's going to change unless the culture changes," Assembly President Dean Krishna '01 said, adding that he thought the decisions made by the Trustees is a step in the right direction toward making those changes. Approval is most enthusiastic for the development of social and residential space and the reevaluation of the D-Plan. "[D-Plan review] is something the College has needed to do for a really long time," Assembly Vice President Margaret Kuecker '01 said. Vice presidential candidate Chance Hill '01 expressed support for the promised fair treatment of Greek houses as places with individual personalities, in which they would be given the opportunity to meet the Trustee's standards. Task Force Member Kate Laswell '02 said, "I'm excited by the fact that the Trustees were so generous in their ability to conceive so many new parts to Dartmouth," referring to the creation of new social spaces and physical construction. Many felt the Trustees had made many of their decisions before reading student proposals, but, as Alex Wilson '01, Assembly treasurer and presidential candidate, said, "[that is] what we were told to expect." The biggest controversy involved the decision to place a moratorium on the formation of new single-sex residential selective organizations, which, for most, killed hopes of the creation of a seventh sorority house. "The College needs a seventh sorority, if not an eighth or a ninth," said Molly Stutzman '02, Assembly student life chair and candidate for vice president. She added that it is not equitable that the sorority system could not be more like the fraternity system, which has houses higher in number and smaller in size. Moving rush to Winter term, requiring undergraduate advisors to live in Greek houses and failure to emphasize diversity also evoked criticism. "One of my main concerns is that diversity on campus was not addressed as a main issue," presidential candidate Alex Grishman '01 said.


News

Unsurprised students say Trustees ignored their input

|

There were no protests or rallies directed at College administrators yesterday. Nor was there much clamor in the student areas around campus, or signs of disbelief throughout the drizzly day. For the most part, students greeted the second phase of the Trustee Initiative on Social and Residential Life with a subdued reaction, if only because few of the suggestions outlined in College President James Wright and Trustee Chair William H.


Sports

Golfers at NE Div. 1 tourney

|

Lee Birchall '02 continued his solid play of late, shooting rounds of 76-74 -- 150 to finish tied for sixth at the New England Division 1 championship, played at the Country Club of Fairfield in Fairfield, CT. Birchall was only six shots behind the winner, Jim Salinetti of URI, who shot a 73-71 -- 144 . URI won the team title in the field of 18 schools with 591, 17 strokes ahead of Hartford (608). The Big Green finished sixth overall with a 36-hole total of 628. Other notable golfers included Chris Welty '00 (77-78-155), and Jero Esteve '03 (78-80-158). "I'm disappointed with the finish," Birchall said.


News

Faculty says Board missed opportunities to go further

|

Members of the faculty, who voted 81 to 0 in favor of the derecognition of the Greek system in February, reported differing opinions on the Trustees' the Student Life Initiative statement released yesterday. "I'm profoundly disappointed that the Trustees have decided to continue [Coed Fraternity Sorority] recognition as they are presently constituted," English professor Tom Luxon told The Dartmouth yesterday. "Nothing in the decision goes to the reasons for having these organizations that are selective and single-sex," Luxon said.


Sports

Baseball wins 7th in a row at Plymouth St.

|

By Jonathan Riccio Sports Writer The Dartmouth baseball team is on fire. By defeating Plymouth State yesterday by a count of 20-4, Dartmouth extended its winning streak to seven straight games. The team set a school record with 26 hits in the slaughtering of Plymouth State. The game was marked by several huge innings for the Big Green.




News

Taps, fall rush out; clusters in

|

With little fanfare and limited community attention, the Board of Trustees announced yesterday the first wave of changes resulting from the Student Life Initiative, launched last year. And just as the debate following the initial announcement focused on Greek issues, so too did yesterday's more concrete declarations center on Coed Fraternity and Sorority reform -- including moving rush to Winter term, banning taps and bars, upholding the moratorium on most new houses, and abolishing the independent Greek judicial system. More sweeping statements charged the College administration, and chiefly Dean of the College James Larimore, with implementing most of the non-Greek social reforms -- including developing new alcohol and drug policies, building and enhancing residential clusters, and planning new student recreational and dining facilities. In a letter released immediately following the Trustees' announcement, Larimore outlined several changes which would be effective this coming summer, including reversing a steering committee recommendation which would have limited CFS residency and enhancing residential and minority group support staff. In an interview with The Dartmouth, College President James Wright and Trustee Chair William H.



News

Big Green Economy Feature

|

In the longest economic expansion in American history, filled with such stories as Internet opportunities turning dreaming kids into millionaires, one might expect that Dartmouth students would want to eat a piece of the investment pie. And plenty of them do. To encourage undergraduate investment efforts, several students have banded together in investment groups, such as Big Green Investors and the Dartmouth Finance and Investment Club, that provide them the insights and resources that would otherwise be unavailable to them. Read more in our Big Green Economy feature.


News

Ed. dept. is viable, valuable

|

Dartmouth should increase funding for the Education Department, continue its Teacher Preparation Program and add tenure-track professors in education, according to the recently completed external review report of the combated Education Department. The report, in the aftermath of two previous internal reviews that had called for the department's elimination, has served to legitimized the popular education program within the administration. Members of the administration will meet with Chair of the Education Department Andrew Garrod within several weeks to decide how to act on the external committee's recommendations. The previous two reports -- one made in 1993, and the other in 1996 -- cited the pre-professional nature of the department and a lack of scholarship on the part of its faculty as reasons for its elimination. Since then, however, the department has undergone something of a metamorphosis.





Trending