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(10/13/15 11:10pm)
The Divest Dartmouth campaign has been active for three years now — it began back when I was a first-year. In that time, members of the Classes of 2013 to 2019 — not to mention alumni all the way back to the Class of 1967 — have been working tirelessly to disinvest the College’s endowment from 200 fossil fuel companies. Our motivations to get involved were simple — we came to the College to better our futures through education, yet investments that contribute to climate change pose a threat to our own futures and are unfair to future generations of Dartmouth students.
(10/13/15 10:01pm)
The men’s soccer team emerged victorious from a defensive standoff against Yale University (1-9-0, 0-2 Ivy) in New Haven, Connecticut, this past Saturday, taking the game 1-0. The match marked the Big Green’s fourth-straight win and moved Dartmouth (6-3-1, 2-0 Ivy) into a tie for first in the Ivy League with Harvard University (4-4-2, 2-0 Ivy).
(10/13/15 10:01pm)
In trying to make banjos a presences on campus, Reed Sturtevant ’16 cofounded College Folk Society in addition to performing with the Rude Mechanicals.
(10/13/15 8:47pm)
10.14.15.arts.reedsturtevant_Paula.Mendoza
(10/13/15 6:43pm)
On Monday — the federal holiday Columbus Day — posters advertising apparel featuring the Dartmouth Indian appeared in various residence halls on campus. Today, Provost Carolyn Dever and Dean of the College Rebecca Biron co-signed an email to campus condemning the flyers, calling the act of distributing them around campus “cowardly and disrespectful.”
(10/13/15 4:09pm)
Before we reveal the first installment of our column, we would like to provide our readers — if you’re out there — with a brief flash of insight into our creative process.
Scene: Tuesday night in our shockingly color-coordinated living room, Elizabeth upside down on the futon, Katie upright at the table. A 1000-piece jigsaw puzzle is spread out over said table, its pieces rendering the surface completely unusable for any sort of work (hello, combined job applications and midterm season).
(10/13/15 10:23am)
Here are some Dartmouth students’ Texts From Last Night:
(10/13/15 7:52am)
Are you fruity? Do you have an earthy bouquet and a hint of clove? Can the discerning taster detect within you subtle banana notes? Are you ready and waiting to be poured into someone's mouth from overhead? Take this quiz and find out (which boxed wine you are).
(10/13/15 4:39am)
Visitors sit down for a meal at the current Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, which will be rebuilt starting this fall.
(10/13/15 4:38am)
Geisel School of Medicine professor Giovanni Bosco was awarded a $3.7 million grant for his epigenetics work.
(10/13/15 4:36am)
humanity uprooted
(10/12/15 10:52pm)
In the 2016 presidential election, attacks on candidates are becoming increasingly vitriolic. Case in point — the incessant attention devoted to the release of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton’s past emails. Clinton’s use of a personal email account while she was Secretary of State was acknowledged last March, and seven months later, it is still a recurring story used to undermine her campaign.
(10/12/15 10:50pm)
It has been months since the 2016 presidential campaign season started, and I still have to rub my eyes as I walk by the Class of 1953 Commons newsstands each morning seeing presidential candidate Donald Trump in the headlines. The usual “joke candidates” should have died out by now — and it is clear that most consider Trump a joke. A June 2015 Huffington Post and YouGov poll indicated only 21 percent of Americans consider Trump to be a serious candidate. Yet, despite no significant changes in campaigning style and few specific policy announcements, Trump has gone from being a political laughingstock to the leading contender for the Republican presidential nomination. Frankly, I do not know how to explain that — but I will give it a try.
(10/12/15 10:40pm)
George “Skip” Battle ’66 has pledged to contribute up to $5 million to the College for the construction of the new Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, the College announced on Friday. Battle, former Ask.com CEO and senior Aspen Group member, will match donations from any source up to $5 million, for a possible $10 million gift in total, more than half of the total projected cost of $17 million to rebuild the structure.
(10/12/15 10:39pm)
Visitors sit down for a meal at the current Moosilauke Ravine Lodge, which will be rebuilt starting this fall.
(10/12/15 10:38pm)
When Giovanni Bosco was a child, he left a small piece of cheese in a plastic ball and found maggots inside the next day.
(10/12/15 10:38pm)
Geisel School of Medicine professor Giovanni Bosco was awarded a $3.7 million grant for his epigenetics work.
(10/12/15 10:37pm)
On Monday, Oct. 12, the Dickey Center for International Understanding conducted a Humanity Uprooted panel to explain the causes and effects of Europe’s refugee crisis. The panel was held in Cook Auditorium in the late afternoon.
(10/12/15 10:36pm)
humanity uprooted
(10/12/15 10:12pm)
In preparation for their Friday, Oct. 16 performance at the Hopkins Center, The Knights — a Brooklyn, New York-based orchestra collective — will have a five-day residency at the College, meeting with students, visiting classes and local schools and performing with student groups.