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The Dartmouth
June 13, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Other Ivies announce all-star speakers

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Although College officials will not reveal the name of the speaker for the senior class's Commencement exercises, Dartmouth's peer institutions have already announced a wide range of prominent figures. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright will be speaking at Harvard University's Commencement to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Marshall Plan, according to the Harvard Crimson.




Opinion

DDS Bites

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The forum held by Dartmouth Dining Services last Wednesday night on the future of the meal plan epitomizes the dysfunctional nature of the current meal system.


Sports

Women's lax shoots for Ivy title against Brown

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The Big Green will put their game-winning strategy to the test tomorrow as the women's lacrosse team takes on the Brown Bears for a shot at the Ivy title. Now alone at the top of the Ivy totem pole, Dartmouth (8-2 overall, 4-0 Ivy) will enter the game hot off a 13-7 win over the Yale Bulldogs on Wednesday. "When we played Yale, everything just clicked," sophomore Heather McNulty said.



Sports

Men's lacrosse late score

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The Yale Bulldogs used a 7-0 explosion in the third quarter to soar past the men's lacrosse team,. eventually beating the Big Green 15-11 yesterday afternoon.




Opinion

Silence

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When I was twelve, I went to the bathroom one morning to brush my teeth and found a book lying on the counter: "Ann Landers Talks to Teenagers About Sex." "Ahhhh, I thought.


Opinion

Poll: The Dartmouth's Duty is to Report the News, Not Influence or Create It

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To the Editor: With Tuesday's front-page article "Eilertsen '99 leads on election eve," The Dartmouth once again demonstrated its insatiable appetite to exert influence over the leadership of the Dartmouth student body. The response rate of 13.8 percent on the newspaper's poll rendered the study useless for any prognosis of election results, yet The Dartmouth considered it news.



Sports

Athlete of the Week

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Freshman Brian Nickerson provided the offensive punch behind the baseball team's 6-0 week by batting .545 (12-for-22) with five extra-base hits (4 doubles, 1 HR) and eight RBIs. Among the rookie's biggest games were a 4-for-5 performance against UMass-Lowell, and a 2-for-3 game against Cornell that included two walks, a double, a homer and four RBIs. For his stellar stats, Nickerson was named the Ivy League's Player of the Week.


Opinion

Not My Dartmouth

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You know, I've heard that Dartmouth is like the date rape capital of the world." So said Karen as we walked down the hall of our all-girls high school in April of 1993. "And where did you hear that?" I asked defensively. I had a reason to be defensive; in the four days since I'd been accepted to Dartmouth, I'd already heard that there were no women here, that the Greek system was so big and all-powerful that if you were not a member of a sorority or a fraternity you had better resign yourself to having no friends and that there were no Catholics here.





News

Winners propelled by personality

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In an election campaign season that featured little disagreement and candidates that many felt were hard to tell apart, the results in the presidential and vice-presidential races could hardly have been more disparate. Frode Eilertsen '99 won the Student Assembly presidency in a runaway, while Nahoko Kawakyu '99 took the vice presidency in a nail-biter. But while their margins of victory were different, both Eilertsen and Kawakyu share one very important thing -- they were propelled to victory in large part because of their personalities. Not much variety Many of the issues were the same -- for example, reforming the Assembly, making it more representative and increasing its influence over the administration. Furthermore, a lot of the candidates for Assembly president and vice president had worked closely with each other in the past, and may have been reluctant to engage in aggressive campaigns against one another. As current Assembly President Jon Heavey '97 put it, there "wasn't a whole lot of variety on the ballot." There was a clear separation between presidential write-in candidates Unai Montes-Irueste '98 and Kathy Kim '00 and the two candidates on the ballot, Eilertsen and Scott Jacobs '99. The write-ins combined for just over 12 percent of the total, while Jacobs and Eilertsen combined for almost 80 percent of the vote. Perhaps the biggest mystery of the election is how Eilertsen and Jacobs -- who orchestrated campaigns of similar proportions and ran on many of the same issues -- were separated by more than 600 votes and 40 percentage points. "I'm shocked that it was so lopsided," Jacobs said.