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The Dartmouth
December 16, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia

Opinion

25 Years Later

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This weekend I celebrated the 25th Anniversary of Coeducation at Dartmouth. To me, the Coed Celebration is not just about seeing Meryl Streep, or passively attending the one weekend's events.



News

Streep honored by DFS at Spaulding ceremony

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Two-time Academy Award-winning actress Meryl Streep, this year's Dartmouth Film Award honoree, likened her experience as one of a handful of females at a Dartmouth with several thousand males in 1970 to being "a canary in a mine." Streep, who received her Dartmouth Film Society award on Saturday night as part of the 25th anniversary of coeducation weekend, not surprisingly said that attending the College two years before the dawn of coeducation was not easy. An exchange student from Vassar for one term, Streep said she remembers feeling "unhappy and lonely" while at Dartmouth and recalled "taking long walks across the quad and weeping." But there was no isolation on Saturday night. When the 10-time Oscar nominee appeared on Spaulding Auditorium's stage Saturday to accept the Dartmouth Film Award, she was greeted by a standing ovation. Streep gestured for the audience to sit down, but the ovation continued for over a minute. She said that, before arriving at the auditorium, she wondered what would happen "if they gave a tribute and nobody came." "Thank you so much for coming," she told the capacity crowd.



News

Barreca '79 tells it like it was

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Prominent alumna Regina Barreca '79 discussed women's experiences in a world dominated by males and addressed how well her years at Dartmouth prepared her for the "world out there" to an audience consisting mainly of women at a luncheon on Saturday at Leede Arena. Barreca -- an English professor at the University of Connecticut who says she writes non-fiction because "if you listen carefully enough, you won't have to make things up" -- initially directed the spotlight not at herself, but at a different group of Dartmouth women. Speaking as part of the College's 25th anniversary of coeducation celebration, Barreca asked the 50 "invited women leaders" -- mostly juniors and seniors -- to stand and be recognized for their impressive achievements at Dartmouth. Barreca, known for her sense of humor and her vivacious and energetic way of speaking in public, then began her speech, which dealt with a brand of feminism utterly different from that which is commonly denoted by the term. "The definition of feminism is the radical belief that women are human beings," she said, but added that being a feminist does not necessarily mean being militant, radical or aggressive. She peppered her speech with a multitude of personal anecdotes which called forth frequent bursts of explosive laughter and spontaneous applause from the audience. Going on to speak about her Dartmouth experience, she recalled how intimidated she felt at first -- being rated an "8" on a scale of ten by a group of her male peers, and feeling out of place in a female community which seemed to her to exist entirely of tall, blonde women. "I didn't think a place could scare me," Barreca told The Dartmouth in an interview after the speech, but she said that encountering adversity from her male classmates was unnerving -- not to mention demeaning -- at first. However, Barreca said she ended up having was a "fabulous experience" and called Dartmouth the right choice. Women's lives, she said in the speech, are very similar, and that is why women bond instantly, making their life stories known to each other in three-minute conversations.











News

College welcomes 20 new profs

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Twenty new professors have joined the Dartmouth faculty this year, an average number of appointments, according to Dean of the Faculty Edward Berger. Becoming a professor at Dartmouth is not easy.




Sports

Young Big Green playing with confidence

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On Tuesday, the women's tennis team buried UMass on the Topliff courts by a score of 9-0. The matches were hard-fought, but the result was lopsided as the Big Green came away with the sweep of the Minutemen.


Sports

Big Green Sports Briefs

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Murray is Player of the Week Anne Murray '00, an outside hitter on the Big Green women's volleyball team, was named Ivy League player of the week for her efforts last week.


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