Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
44 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
(09/17/24 9:05am)
This summer, the College declined to hire University of Illinois Chicago criminology, law and justice professor Nicole Nguyen as a tenured geography professor, despite unanimous support from the department, according to an email statement from Nguyen. The decision sparked controversy among academics and students at institutions worldwide.
(09/04/24 9:30am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
(09/04/24 9:00am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
(09/04/24 9:15am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Freshman special issue.
(08/09/24 9:15am)
In the coming weeks, all Dartmouth Dining locations except Collis Market will replace Coca-Cola beverages with PepsiCo products, Dartmouth Dining director Jon Plodzik wrote in an email statement to The Dartmouth. Following a 10-year beverage contract with Coca-Cola — which expired in July — the College signed a new seven-year beverage contract with PepsiCo, he wrote.
(08/09/24 9:00am)
On July 1, Kristi Clemens stepped into a new role, becoming the executive director of the Dialogue Project — an initiative that focuses on facilitating conversations across different perspectives for undergraduates. Clemens — who first joined Dartmouth as an associate director of residential education in 2009 — previously co-led the Dialogue Project with Dean of the Faculty Elizabeth Smith, while also serving as the Title IX coordinator. Her position as Title IX coordinator has now been filled by interim Title IX coordinator Sarah Harebo, while Smith will continue to serve as the project’s primary contact with faculty. The Dartmouth sat down with Clemens to discuss her new position, her reflections on the project’s first year and her vision going forward.
(08/02/24 5:00am)
On July 11, the United States Third Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a district court’s decision to reject a request from the National Collegiate Athletics Association to dismiss a landmark case for student athletes. The case, Johnson v. NCAA, asks whether universities should consider student athletes employees — a crucial question in Dartmouth’s dispute over the basketball team unionizing in March.
(08/02/24 9:15am)
Last month, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced that Dean of the College Scott Brown would leave Dartmouth at the end of July. He had served as Dean of the College since October 2022, following a period as interim dean beginning in August 2021. Associate dean of student support services Anne Hudak and associate dean for student life Eric Ramsey will serve as interim Deans of the College. The Dartmouth sat down with Brown — whose connection to the College dates back to the early 1990s, when he served as an area officer for the Office of Residential Life — to discuss his tenure as dean, his departure and his future plans.
(08/02/24 9:10am)
On June 23, Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center nurses ended their unionization effort, according to a statement posted on Instagram by the Dartmouth Nurses Alliance. The statement cited a failure to obtain a supermajority of nurse support as the reason for the campaign’s end.
(07/23/24 3:18am)
On July 18, Grafton assistant county attorney Mariana Pastore filed charges against the remaining protesters arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest on May 1, the Valley News reported. Pastore declined to press charges against four individuals — including history professor Annelise Orleck — and moved misdemeanor charges to violations for 20 individuals.
(07/19/24 9:05am)
On July 31, Hanover town manager Alex Torpey will step down from his position after two years in office, according to a Town announcement. The Selectboard unanimously voted to name planning, zoning and codes director Robert Houseman the interim town manager, the announcement wrote.
(07/18/24 3:19pm)
Dean of the College Scott Brown will leave Dartmouth at the end of the month, College President Sian Leah Beilock announced in an email to campus on July 18. Brown — who has held the position since October 2022 — was set to serve until June 2025.
(07/12/24 9:05am)
In 2021, at a banquet celebrating former Dartmouth athletics director and women’s lacrosse coach Josie Harper, Mary Page Michel ’87 asked former lacrosse players to stand if they coached or taught lacrosse after graduating. Michel — who played under Harper from 1983 to 1987 — said virtually everyone stood.
(06/09/24 9:15am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Commencement & Reunions special issue.
(05/29/24 7:30am)
Few who walk past the lawn between Parkhurst Hall and McNutt Hall know that the remains of an 18th-century house lie beneath the grass. According to anthropology professor Jesse Casana, the so-called Brown House, built in 1790, passed through different owners before eventually housing Susan Brown and her daughters from 1850 to 1900.
(05/24/24 9:05am)
On May 22, the Dartmouth Democrats, New Hampshire College Democrats, New Hampshire Young Democrats and Rockefeller Center for Public Policy co-hosted Democratic N.H. gubernatorial candidates Joyce Craig, Jonathan Kiper and Cinde Warmington for a public forum. The three each spoke about their policy positions on subjects including climate change, voting rights and education.
(05/17/24 9:05am)
This article is featured in the 2024 Green Key special issue.
(05/16/24 9:10am)
On May 10, the history department hosted a teach-in panel about past protests on Dartmouth’s campus. Three history professors highlighted several protests in Dartmouth’s history that resulted in peaceful reactions from the administration.
(05/08/24 2:30am)
Approximately 150 students, faculty and community members gathered on the Baker lawn this afternoon for a pro-Palestinian rally, titled “The Endowment is Political.” The rally was organized by the Dartmouth New Deal Coalition, a student activist group that advocates for divestment from companies with affiliations with Israel.
(05/03/24 11:49pm)
On May 1, former State Department director Josh Paul canceled his Dickey Center for International Understanding event due to the College’s response to encampment protests that night, he wrote in a post on LinkedIn. Paul — who resigned from the State Department on Oct. 17, 2023 in protest of the Biden administration’s military assistance to Israel during the ongoing conflict in Gaza — was scheduled to participate in an event on May 2 titled “When American Diplomats Dissent” with former State Department career diplomat Elizabeth Shackelford.