Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism.
The Dartmouth
December 20, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
News

Judge dismisses alumni suit against College

|

Grafton County Superior Court Judge Edward Fitzgerald III issued a preliminary dismissal order on March 10 for a class-action lawsuit filed by seven College alumni against the College and the Alumni Association. Last May, William Tell Jr.




Opinion

Honorable Code

|

The Committee on Standards and computer science department behaved in the most appropriate manner considering the circumstances surrounding the recent cheating accusations in dismissing all charges against CS4 students.


News

LA Times names prof. as book prize finalist

|

The Los Angeles Times selected English and creative writing professor Thomas Sleigh as a finalist for the 1999 LATimes Book Prize in poetry for his anthology "The Dreamhouse." The collection of poems excel at describing certain moods in great detail, and often contain references to Greek and Latin myths. The distinction comes after a series of awards presented to Sleigh, including the Shelley Memorial Award in 1999 and the Lila Wallace-Readers Digest Award in 1993.


News

Winter topics include cheating, initiative

|

Winter term was highlighted by events such as the release of the steering committee report, the Computer Science 4 cheating scandal, and Phi Delta Alpha fraternity's derecognition. The long awaited steering committee report was released at the beginning of the term after a year of preparation, recommending drastic changes to the College's Greek system to bring it in line with the Board of Trustees' vision for student life. While a single-sex Greek system would remain intact -- for the time being -- the steering committee's recommendations made good on College President James Wright's promise to end the Greek system "as we know it." The steering committee recommended Coed Fraternity Sorority houses be held to stricter facility, organizational and membership requirements -- admitting that not all houses will be able to fulfill the requirements, and therefore will be derecognized by the College. The report stated, "This reduction is desirable in order to eliminate the historical dominance by the CFS organizations of Dartmouth social life.



News

EXTRA - COLLEGE DROPS ALL CHARGES IN CHEATING SCANDAL HEARINGS

|

After the Committee on Standards heard only 27 of the 63 cases of alleged Computer Science 4 cheating, the College announced today that it is withdrawing all charges brought against students by former visiting professor Rex Dwyer. According to Dean of the College James Larimore, who served as non-voting chair of the COS, it became clear after more than 34 hours of hearings and deliberation that the body would be unable to distinguish with certainty between those who cheated and those who received the solutions to the homework from legitimate sources. "The Committee concluded that some cheating did occur," Larimore wrote in a letter to the Dartmouth community.


Opinion

CS4 Scandal is Appalling

|

To the Editor: As a student at a school with a very large computer science program, I find it appalling that a professor would send so many students in front of the honor code committee.


News

Berry architect inherited father's dream

|

Berry Library's architect, who has always been fascinated by buildings, remembers fondly an experience he had in a famous New York train station years ago. "When I was eight, my dad took me to Penn Station and showed it to me," Robert Venturi said -- and even so early in his life, he was amazed by the station's structure. Venturi's father, a poor Italian immigrant, had dreamed of becoming an architect, but his dream did not materialize.


Sports

Penn stays perfect in Ivy League

|

With two wins over the weekend, the University of Pennsylvania men's basketball team wrapped up its second consecutive Ivy League championship -- its sixth in 10 years and its 20th in the last 31 campaigns. The Quakers took the Ivy title with 13 wins in 13 games.


News

Faculty votes for UG society review

|

Members of the Arts and Sciences faculty voted yesterday to support recommendations by the steering committee to review Senior and Undergraduate Societies, Affinity Houses and Programs and to introduce new guidelines for alcohol and other drugs. The only spirited discussion centered around the fourth proposal offered at the faculty meeting -- for faculty members on the steering committee to report annually to the faculty on the implementation of the recommendations for changes resulting from the initiative. The motion wound up passing after an amendment proposed by religion professor Susan Ackerman was included that called for the steering committee faculty representatives to monitor process in implementation of the faculty's recommendations from the Feb.



News

'Bet you're on Blitz' after upgrade launches

|

Students off-campus over spring break will have a new and improved version of WebBlitz to use. Due for release this week, WebBlitz 3.0 will include a new piece of software called Bet You're on Blitz, referred to by its developers as "BYOB." The new WebBlitz version was developed by The Basement, an independent student organization at Dartmouth responsible for WebBlitz, the DID, and the Exchange. Karolyn Abram '00, a member of The Basement team, thought of the idea of BYOB when she used BlitzMail and WebBlitz and wanted to know if her friends were also on blitz.


News

Super Tuesday voters might choose nominees

|

Voters across 16 states will cast their primary ballots today -- "Super Tuesday" -- marking the largest Election 2000 event on the political calendar thus far. Today's elections could have a significant impact on both parties' nominations process because candidates will have the opportunity to win a large number of delegates needed to secure their party's nomination -- and both underdogs need crucial wins to boost their sagging momentum and stay alive in the race. Much of today's media attention will surround the primary races in California and New York because they have the most delegates at stake. They will also be the sites of today's most interesting races because polls show the races are the closest there with a large number of undecided voters, according to government Professor Lynn Vavreck, who specializes in campaigns and elections. Democratic Presidential candidates former Senator Bill Bradley and Vice President Al Gore will vie for 367 delegates in California and 243 in New York.



Opinion

Guns Save Lives

|

To the Editor: Regarding Joe LaBracio's editorial, ("When Will It End?, March 2), I find it troubling that the editorial failed to mention several key pieces of information which may well change the conclusion a reader comes to with regard to guns and school violence. Consider this: In the Pearl, Mississippi incident to which you refer, teacher Joel Myric heard the shots being fired, ran a quarter-mile from the school to his car, retrieved his legally owned handgun and ran back to the school.


Sports

Conference Tournaments

|

Surprising nobody, the University of Pennsylvania clinched its second consecutive Ivy League championship with a fairly easy victory over Yale on Saturday night, rendering their match-up with Princeton tonight relatively meaningless.



News

The Dartmouth takes you on a tour of what will eventually be Berry

|

Construction on the Berry Library has progressed substantially since the project began about two years ago -- and The Dartmouth recently had a chance to walk through the interior of what will eventually be a huge expansion of the College's library facilities. Berry will offer students integrated library and computational services, a wide variety of study spaces, a caf and much more in a facility designed to accommodate the College's information media needs far into the future. Below is a walking tour of the various features of the College's newest library. Exterior The last time most people saw the Berry construction project's exterior, it was still a stark outline of steel and concrete. Since it acquired its winter shroud, there have been some dramatic changes to the exterior which are being revealed as the tarpaulins are removed one by one. Although there was controversy over the building's architectural philosophy prior to the beginning of construction two years ago, the building is intended to blend into the campus architectural scheme. "It is a modern building that takes some of the principles of Baker and translates them," Director of Administrative Services John Crane said. The bricks which make Berry's walls were matched as closely as possible to those that were used nearly 85 years ago in the construction of Baker. Even the inset limestone band that circles Berry's wall near the roofline echoes the older library's wooden cornice. The windows of Dartmouth's newest building are also designed to reflect, but not copy, traditional New England architecture. The large number of windows that pierce Berry's walls brings to mind buildings like Dartmouth Hall, but their irregular placement and variations in shape emphasize Berry's modernity. Main entranceway Berry's main entrance faces north towards Moore Hall and opens off of an arcade formed by a decorative, free-standing wall that runs the length of the building's north face. Walking along the arcade that will eventually allow passage between the east and west sides of campus, visitors will be able to look through the floor-to-ceiling windows that line the ground floor on Berry's north side and into an area that will contain a caf and seating area. The caf will serve light snacks and beverages to students who will eat, talk, or study in an environment similar to that found in Collis Caf, with small tables lining the windows, easy chairs, banquette seating and regular tables. Passing through the main doors, visitors will face an island featuring four BlitzMail terminals.