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(10/26/12 2:00am)
The Chronicle of Higher Education's 2012 faculty salary survey reported that Dartmouth's wage gap between genders was the Ivy League's widest for full professors. Still, the issue has not sparked significant campus dialogue, College professors and administrators said.
(10/26/12 2:00am)
The three-year pilot series of academic spotlight programs aims to highlight specific areas of the College's academic and co-curricular opportunities for prospective students, according to Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Maria Laskaris.
(10/26/12 2:00am)
Many have been quick to criticize professor Richard Denton's recent tirade against the current "epidemic" of sexually transmitted diseases as a means of imposing his conservative agenda regarding sex onto students ("Sex and Responsibility," Oct. 18). Becca Rothfeld declared in her most recent column that "it is ludicrous to assert that the only respectful relationships are permanent and monogamous ones" ("Prescriptive Paternalism," Oct. 22). Rothfeld, of course, is right. There are sexual partners outside of permanent and monogamous relationships who truly respect one another. But Rothfeld refuses to acknowledge that such a scenario is often the exception rather than the rule; respect for the feelings of another and respect for oneself are often absent in sexual interactions. In trying to defend sexual freedom, Rothfeld overlooks the reality of what she sarcastically labels "the toxic hook-up culture'" here at Dartmouth.
(10/26/12 2:00am)
Much to my chagrin, I am no longer living in South Mass 111. My sophomore year room draw number was Lodge-worthy, and I needed an out. So fellow opportunistic Jew Sam Worth '13 and I contacted our extraordinarily talented and recently injured friend, Keith Moffat '13, to see if he wanted to bunk up with us. A member of the United States Ski Team and a chronically smooth talker, Keith parlayed his leg injury into a prime South Mass triple, which Sam and I happily inhabited. Keith is back from competition for Homecoming in Hanover, and he graciously granted me a rare in-person interview.
(10/26/12 2:00am)
In their final races before this weekend's Ivy League Heptagonal Championships, members of the Dartmouth men's and women's cross country teams competed at Brown University's Rothenberg Invitational on Oct. 19. The Big Green men, led by individual champion Tony Anzivino '16, took third, while the women took second in wet conditions at Goddard State Park in East Greenwich, R.I.
(10/26/12 2:00am)
"It's an exciting time for us," co-captain and linebacker Bronson Green '14 said. "It's a position Dartmouth football hasn't been in in recent history, but obviously we have to make the most of the opportunity."
(10/25/12 1:00pm)
This weekend, my apartment was more overrun than usual with New Orleanians — I’ve never been to New Orleans, so I asked them to show me brunch NOLA-style.
(10/25/12 11:30am)
(10/25/12 11:30am)
The Horror Auteurs
(10/25/12 8:30am)
The Office—Thursdays at 9 p.m. on NBC
(10/25/12 7:00am)
(10/25/12 7:00am)
Freshmen, the bonfire will be the highlight of your homecoming. The rest of your weekend is going to be spent trying to get on table while ’84s play speed and slam. Don’t try to keep up. It’s not just you — few of us can. Anyway, apparently the administration is worried that the bonfire now constitutes hazing, so I am heretofore forbidden from telling you to touch the fire. Lest the old traditions fail, am I right? But honestly, the bonfire is a hoot! If you were subjected to the horror of listening to ghost stories and being fed green eggs and ham on Trips without lasting psychological damage, you’ll survive the fire too.
(10/25/12 2:00am)
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(10/25/12 2:00am)
A study conducted by the Higher Education Research Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles found that full-time faculty members are spending less time teaching, Inside Higher Ed reported on Wednesday. The annual Undergraduate Teaching Faculty study based on a survey of 23,824 faculty members found that the percentage of full-time professors at universities teaching nine or more hours each week fell from 56.5 to 43.6 percent in the past 10 years. The percentage of professors working only one to four hours a week has more than doubled from 7 to 15.8 percent during this time, according to the study. The survey also found that women are more likely to use "student-centered" teaching approaches than male faculty, with 78 percent of female professors and 68 percent of male professors utilizing class discussion. In addition, the survey found that over 50 percent of academics now identify as liberal or "far left," with faculty members at private research universities leaning the farthest left. While female professors tend to identify as more liberal than their male colleagues, less than one percent of college professors overall identify as "far right," regardless of type of institution or gender. The Institute's 1998 survey found that less than half of professors interviewed identified as liberal, and over 30 percent considered themselves moderates, according to Inside Higher Ed. Institute Director Sylvia Hurtado said it is unclear what has caused this shift, but she believes the increased average age of full-time professors may play a role, Inside Higher Ed reported.
(10/25/12 2:00am)
Celebrating its 10th anniversary this fall, the Master's of Public Health program at The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice focuses on training leaders who will analyze, organize and effect change in the public health and health care delivery sectors, according to Director Mark Splaine.
(10/25/12 2:00am)
While the Hopkins Center's 50th Anniversary and the College's Year of the Arts initiative have drawn attention to the arts on campus, some students in the performing arts feel that their needs for rehearsal and performance space have not been met. The influx of professional artists has also cut down on student performance opportunities and left some students with the impression that the College's resources could have been put to better use.
(10/25/12 2:00am)
To counter the expected drop in sales, stores plan to offer new products, extend the availability of popular seasonal offerings and move pre-break sales to earlier in the year. Other stores will rely on local customers or the influx of students during other parts of the year.