Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.
Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism. Support independent student journalism.
The Dartmouth
December 16, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Multimedia
News

Bosworth selected to be new Trustee chair

|

The Board of Trustees announced yesterday that Stephen Bosworth '61, the former U.S. ambassador to Tunisia and the Philippines, will become the new chair of the College's Board of Trustees in June. Bosworth will replace John Rosenwald '52 who began his chairmanship in 1993. Rosenwald will remain chair until after Commencement on June 9, when Bosworth will take over. Bosworth said he was chosen several months ago, but the Trustees kept the selection secret "as a matter of politeness and protocol." Bosworth, who has served as a Trustee since 1992, said during his tenure as chairman, the Trustees will address the "question of how we can maintain the excellence Dartmouth College has achieved." Bosworth said he will follow the vision "laid out by John Rosenwald and by [College President] Jim Freedman, which is how to make Dartmouth an even better institution." "You can never be complacent," he added. Bosworth said he hopes his life experience will serve him well in his new position. "This is a new level of responsibility for me vis a vis Dartmouth College," he said.



Opinion

Friday Night Sonata

|

It was early spring, and I had already spent a weary hour headed back up to Hanover on the Dartmouth Mini Coach from Logan Airport.





Sports

Baseball snags 8-7 win over Tufts

|

Call them the Big Green Grit if you want, because with their backs up against the wall, they are all heart. The Big Green rallied in their last two at-bats to rip victory from the hands of the Tufts Jumbos (yes, there is a worse mascot than Green), giving Dartmouth its second straight come from behind victory, 8-7. With Dartmouth down by two runs in the bottom of the last inning, Jimmy Meyer '97 led off with a scorching rope to center field, landing him at first base with number three hitter Andrew Spencer '97 coming to the plate.


Opinion

The Lark Ascending

|

The act of writing about intellectualism (and the lack of it in certain unmentionable places) naturally leads to a consideration of just what it is that fuels a person to whom the label "intellectual" applies.


News

Events to examine gender, poverty

|

Activists, scholars and low-income women from around the country will gather at the College this weekend to examine issues confronting women in poverty and to search for ways to improve their situation, as part of the Gender and Poverty Conference. The conference, organized by History Professors Mary Kelley and Annelise Orleck and Women's Studies Visiting Instructor Jo Ann Woodsum, will present different perspectives on impoverished women by featuring a wide variety of speakers, panelists, workshops and readings. "We wanted to have a conference that dealt with the most pressing issues of our time -- women and children in poverty and the increasing percentage of women in poverty," Orleck said. "We tried to bring together academics, scholars, activists and people from a wide variety of backgrounds," she said. Miranda Johnson '97, who was on the conference's planning committee in the winter and is now helping to coordinate student volunteers, said the conference will be "very action-oriented." "It's a combination of scholars and activists, who are all pro-women, coming together to devise strategies to combat women in poverty," she said. The conference will begin with a reception and keynote address this evening and will continue through Sunday afternoon. Conference organizers said one goal of the conference is to eliminate the generally negative attitude toward poor women. Orleck, who is researching the history of welfare rights organizations since World War II, said, "I have a lot of contact with low-income women and am very concerned with stereotyping." "I wanted to participate in a conference to dispel most of those stereotypes and see what kinds of solutions we might find for the problems of women in poverty that are real solutions, not just ways of blaming and punishing them further," she said. Recent discussions concerning welfare reform in Congress make the conference's topic relevant. It "came together as a topic that interested us and other people, but it has turned out to be a topic that is very timely," Kelley said. "The renewed rhetoric in Congress about reform of the welfare system [caused] concern on the part of the [conference] organizers about the anti-poor women rhetoric," Woodsum said. Many people think "poor women are deserving of the status of being in poverty, because they have too many kids or they are lazy or uneducated," she said. Each of the conference organizers had her own goal for the weekend. Woodsum said many of her students in Women's Studies or Native American Studies have trouble relating to issues of poverty. She said she was particularly interested in the conference's inclusion of "actual people on welfare who will talk about how they ended up in poverty, and bring some understanding to the students about poverty." Kelley said her hope is that the conference will increase the general awareness of the College community on these topics. "I hope that it will be valuable for everybody [that they will] ... increase their commitment to think about these issues and act on them," she said. Johnson said she also wanted to see the conference affect people's lives and actions. "I hope to have people work on proactive strategies after the conference to affect public policy in the future," Johnson said. Orleck said she has similar goals and added that she hoped conference participants would educate each other as well. The conference organizers said they were excited about the speakers, panelists and performers and cited Dolores Huerta, co-founder and first vice president of the United Farm Workers of America, as a particularly interesting guest. Huerta "is a legend," Orleck said.


Sports

Men's volleyball club closes out successful season at 35-7

|

The success story behind Dartmouth's men's volleyball team is an endearing one. After the demotion from varsity status to club status three years ago, the future of the program looked bleak at best. Yet this team found a way to carry on through two tough seasons without funding or coaching to persevere until this season, when talent, experience, and heart combined in a magical formula to make men's volleyball team one of the college's most successful programs in the '95-'96 season. Last weekend, the team saw the fruition of its three-year uphill struggle.


News

Native Americans discuss tribal identity

|

Five Native American panel members representing the different tribes of New England discussed last night the importance of tribal identity and the problems confronting the native communities of the Northeast in the coming century. About 40 people attended the discussion titled "Where Do We Go From Here?


News

Environmental racism debated

|

Director of the Environmental Justice Initiative Vernice Miller, Government Professor Roger Masters and Chemistry Professor James Worman debated the nature and characteristics of environmental racism in a panel discussion held in the Rockefeller Center last night. Robert Braile, a Boston Globe reporter who specializes in environmental issues, moderated the discussion titled "Environmental Racism: Does it Exist?/Is it a Class Issue?" that about 40 people attended. Miller began the panel by arguing that environmental hazards tend to be located in minority communities. "Environmentally hazardous sites such as sewage and toxic waste treatment plants are many times more likely to be located in minority communities than in white communities," he said After considering various parameters such as income and location, the Environmental Protection Agency "realized race is the most significant indicator in the areas where these sites are located," Miller said. She said contrary to popular belief, environmentally hazardous sites are not only located in low-income communities but can be found in African American communities regardless of the level of income of the people living in that community. She cited her community, West Harlem, N.Y., as an example of a wealthy African-American community filled with environmentally hazardous facilities. Worman, who defined environmental racism as "inequitable exposure of minorities to environmental hazards," argued that environmental racism does not exist. Worman said Miller's statistics about hazardous industrial plants being located on minority communities were correct.


News

Hunt to visit College as Montgomery Fellow

|

Al Hunt, the executive Washington editor for The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones and Company, will be the College's next Montgomery Fellow when he visits the campus for three days next month. Hunt, who has also been a commentator on Cable News Network's "The Capital Gang" since 1984, will attend classes, meet with students and lecture during his visit from May 6-8. The Montgomery Fellowship was established in 1977 by Kenneth Montgomery '25 and his wife Harle, to "provide for the advancement of the academic realm of the College ... making possible new dimensions for, as well as extraordinary enrichments to, the educational experience" at Dartmouth, according to a College press release. Montgomery Endowment Director Barbara Gerstner said the Montgomery Endowment Steering Committee hoped to get a political journalist because this is an election year. The committee is composed of College Provost Lee Bollinger, Dean of the College Lee Pelton, Dean of the Faculty James Wright, a trustee emeritus, an alumnus, three faculty members and two members of the Montgomery family. Hunt said he accepted the fellowship because "they asked." "Dartmouth is a great place, and I knew a couple students up there, and I thought it would be good to get away for a couple days," he said. "I thought it would be fun," he said. Hunt said he is excited about visiting an academic environment. "This is going to be terrific for me," he said.


News

Students march to take back the night

|

Approximately 150 students and administrators gathered at numerous locations across campus last evening to participate in "Take Back the Night," a worldwide protest against violence and rape towards women. The evenings' events began with several speeches about sexual abuse in front of Webster Hall and concluded with a 15-minute march around campus and candlelight vigil on the Green. "This is a big public statement to the campus and the community," said Liza Veto, acting coordinator of the Sexual Assault Awareness Program.




Arts

Handel Society to sing with N. H. orchestra

|

Works by Poulenc, Brahms and Mahler are on the program for a concert by the Handel Society and the New Hampshire Symphony Orchestra tonight in Spaulding Auditorium at 8:00 p.m.. In the first half of the concert, the Handel Society and the New Hampshire Symphony Orchestra will collaborate under the baton of Handel Society conductor and Music Professor Melinda O'Neal. They will perform Poulenc's Gloria and Brahms' Schicksalslied, and soprano Susan Narucki is the scheduled guest artist. In the second half, James Bolle, the orchestra's conductor, will lead the orchestra in Mahler's Symphony No.


Arts

Meltzer talks on wartime drama

|

"I am working against the grain of traditional war studies," said Annabelle Meltzer, a professor at the University of Tel Aviv, Israel and a scholar who teaches the dramatic and historical events of World War I. Meltzer's studies do not focus on wartime tactics, but on the spontaneous theatrical performances that occurred in the French legions from 1914 to 1918. The universe of the soldier on the western front was one of hysteria and confusion, with 745 miles of trenches and 12 million men creeping sluggishly back and forth across the Flanders plain, she said. Meltzer recited a quote by the ancient Chinese military tactician Sun Tzu that "war is a project of deception and survival." In that spirit, she said the men of the French army deceived themselves from the horrors they faced each day with theater. Meltzer said the slapdash performances written and performed by the soldiers attracted crowds varying in size from 10 to 30 thousand men. She showed fascinating slides of army regulars watching staged performances while shells were raining down about 200 yards away. The professor pointed out that the concept of wartime theater extends beyond the literal plays performed by the soldiers to other aspects of military life. She said there are two established forms of performance.




Trending