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The Dartmouth
July 10, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth

Daily Debriefing

The members of the College's Task Force on Sexual and Physical Assault will include Taylor Holt '09, Soo Hyun Roh '10, Alexandra Schindler '10 and Derek Weiss '09, according to an e-mail from special assistant to the Dean of the College Katherine Burke. Director of Counseling and Health Resources Mark Reed, Dean of upperclass students Rovana Popoff and Associate Director of Safety and Security Keysi Montas will also sit on the committee. The Task Force plans to organize campus-wide discussions about sexual assault during Winter and Spring terms and to produce a final report summarizing the members' findings by the end of Spring term, according to the e-mail.

In an effort to reduce the number of campus-wide e-mails from students seeking lost or stolen personal possessions, Student Assembly has announced a new bulletin service that provides a forum for students to report lost and found items. Students can blitz the account "Lost and Found" to be listed on the bulletin. The Student Life committee created the bulletin after numerous requests to Student Assembly, according to Uthman Olagoke '11, vice president of the committee. Olagoke explained that students lack a central location to look for missing possessions. "If you lose a jacket in Haldeman, it stays in Haldeman," Olagoke said. So far, the "Lost and Found" account has received more e-mails praising the bulletin's creation than e-mails reporting lost materials, Will Hix '12, a member of the committee, said. "The critical thing is getting exposure as soon as we can," he added. The committee hopes that the student body will start actively using the service by Winter Carnival, Hix said.

Jodi Archambault Gillette '91 will serve as the first Native American deputy associate director of the intergovernmental affairs office, where she will advise the government about issues pertaining to Indian affairs, according to a White House press release. The post has been empty for the past eight years, an article in the Missoulian, the daily newspaper of Missoula, Mont., said. Gillette majored in government and Native American studies at Dartmouth, and was a letter winner in basketball. A member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Gillette received a master's degree in public administration from the University of Minnesota, according to the article in the Missoulian. Prior to working for President Barack Obama's administration, Gillette campaigned for Obama as the North Dakota First American Vote director. She was also director of the Native American Training Institute, according to the press release.