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

Garmire: Release the Numbers

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The decision by Thayer School of Engineering Dean Elsa Garmire to withhold information from U.S. News and World Report magazine for its graduate school rankings was wrong. Garmire intended to protest the way the magazine ranks engineering schools by withholding Thayer's information.



Arts

Play highlights absurdity, trash can

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Drawing from the absurdist writings of English playwright Samuel Beckett, "Endgame" presents a disturbed and somewhat eccentric portrait of the end of the world. "Endgame," the drama department's latest production, premiers tomorrow at 8 p.m.


News

From New England rum to Milwaukee's best, Dartmouth's hooked

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In 1771, at Dartmouth's first Commencement, the chefs were too stewed on rum to roast the ox provided for the ceremony. In 1947, drunk students at a class beer party in old Stell Hall broke windows, smashed dishes and stole 73 steaks from the refrigerator. In 1952, 2,000 students bearing torches and banging cymbals marched on the dean of the College's house chanting, "We want a beer" to protest a new alcohol policy.


Sports

Big Green scores 90-78 upset over Brown Bears

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If this weekend were a movie, the women's basketball team would surely skip finals and just sit around watching it over and over again until the VCR blew out. Yup, this weekend's 90-78 upset over Brown (10-4) and the mind-boggling 63-48 comeback win over Yale (6-8) the next night would've really made for a great movie -- complete with some Oscar-worthy performances and a few rocks stars here and there. The opening scene against Brown was explosive as the Big Green's Bess Tortolani '98 drained an in-your-face triple to light up the scoreboard.




News

College cracks down on halogen lamps

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The College has decided that more than 1,000 student-owned halogen lamps must be removed from residence halls before Fall term, raising questions about whether the Office of Residential Life will be able to adequately light students' dim dorm rooms. Many halogen lamps can become dangerously hot, reaching temperatures up to 1,200 degrees farenheit.



Opinion

Plane Stat

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I read a statistic that left me in a serious state of disturbed contemplation. Enough rumination to spur the writing about something and nothing -- factual entertainment.


News

Out-of-this-world prof chairs committee

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For 15 years, Mary Hudson has been looking at the sun -- but she never lost her vision. Hudson, the chair of the physics and astronomy department, researches the sun and solar ejections, but she always keeps an eye on the politics here on earth.


Opinion

Hats Off to 'Drunks' Producer

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To the Editor: Over last weekend, John Hart '75 was here showing his film "Drunks," which he produced because it captured "the New England town meeting," a place where anyone could speak and expect the group to listen to their every word, scrutinizing and mulling over what was said. Perhaps, as he suggested, "this [place] never truly existed" in old New England, but Hart's greatest accomplishment is that he managed to foster this community while he was here.


Opinion

Taiwan: The 2-28 Incident

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In honor of one of my ancestral homelands, I'd like to bring your attention to Taiwan. Though a small, little island off the coast of Asia, it is the 14th largest economic power in the world.



Sports

Over the Weekend

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WOMEN'S SQUASH: Heather Duckworth '98 won three matches in the feed-in consolation at the individual collegiate squash championships this weekend.




Sports

Women's hoops plays Brown, Yale at Leede Arena: With Ivy League title out of reach, Big Green seniors will play for pride in their last home game series

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Though their Ivy League title hopes are no more, the women's basketball team will be looking to play the spoiler role this weekend, when the third-place Big Green(6-5) host second-place Brown(10-3) and fourth-place Yale(6-6). Against Brown earlier in the season, Dartmouth was on the receiving end of a 80-61 trouncing. Senior co-Captain Sally Annis hopes the team will improve upon their defensive and rebounding effort from their loss earlier this month. The pressure is on the Bears, however, who have to win all three of their remaining league games to have any shot at winning the title. Traveling to Yale on the same road trip as their loss to Brown, the Big Green downed the Elis 81-73.


News

Winter weather is at its warmest since 1991

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The warmest winter in six years resulted in bad ski conditions and a muddier Green, but has not caused a major change in local business. Weather Services Meterologist Dave Taylor said the unseasonably mild Upper Valley winter is the warmest the area has experienced since 1991. "The temperature has been an average five degrees warmer than normal," he said.


News

College tops Iviews in tenured women

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Despite a male-dominated history and some continuing problems with child care and gender discrimination, women comprise more than one-fifth of the College's tenured faculty -- the highest percentage of tenured female faculty in the Ivy League. According to this year's annual report from the Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action, 22.4 percent of tenured College faculty -- excluding medical faculty -- are female. The other seven Ivy League institutions, on average, have women at 15.3 percent of tenured faculty positions according to a survey conducted by Harvard University. Within the College's Arts and Sciences faculty, 27.4 percent of tenured faculty are women, according to the report. Some administrators attribute this high percentage to the College's intensive efforts to hire and grant tenure to women. Despite assertions that widening the recruiting pool will dilute the teaching standards of the College, Acting Provost and Dean of the Faculty James Wright said he feels Dartmouth has been increasingly successful in recruiting women while at the same time raising the level of excellence in the faculty. "I think we've aggressively tried to make sure our recruiting pools are rich and diverse," he said. Assistant Dean of the Faculty Sheila Culbert said the College has focused its efforts in this direction since the advent of coeducation in 1972. In 1974, the College formulated its first affirmative action plan, accompanied by President John Kemeny's statement about Dartmouth's commitment to hiring women and minorities and fostering a discrimination-free environment. Director of the Office of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Mary Childers said the process of increasing the number of tenured female faculty has been eased by the slow but steady establishment of the supports needed for women to succeed in academia. Childers said the most vital supports involve women faculty with children -- child care assistance, uncontested maternity leave and stopping the tenure clock. College administrators realize that no one can succeed in the intense tenure process if they have simultaneous parenting responsibilities, Childers said French and Italian Professor Marianne Hirsch said she was a single parent when first hired by the College and found child care to be a critical issue. Although the College will now extend the six-year tenure process to seven years for parents of small children and does provide day care assistance, Hirsch said there was still an lack of afternoon child care and vacation care. Childers said "the smallness of the community may make discriminatory behavior more visible and more subject to community censure," which may be another reason the College has been successful in granting tenure to female faculty. In recent years, complaints from female faculty members about gender discrimination have increased, Childers said. Childers said this increase is actually a positive signal, because it means women feel comfortable coming forward with problems. Moreover, most of the recent complaints have been simply misunderstandings and easily rectifiable, Childers said. Childers said the College's emphasis on teaching as well as research makes it an attractive place for many women scholars.A neglect of students in favor of research would be a breach in academic principle for many female scholars, Childers said.


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