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The Dartmouth
August 30, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Campus Blotter

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May 6, 11:07 p.m. Tuck Drive Safety and Security officers responded to a Good Samaritan Call and found an intoxicated female member of the Class of 2014 in the vicinity of the Russell Sage cluster.



News

Daily Debriefing

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Tuck School of Business Dean Paul Danos was re-appointed to a fifth four-year term yesterday, according to an email sent to Tuck students, staff and faculty members by Provost Carol Folt.



News

New online room draw meets mixed reactions

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Despite student complaints regarding delayed updates on the housing vacancy list, the first two nights of the new online room draw system have gone "pretty smoothly," according to Director of Undergraduate Student Housing Rachael Class-Giguere.



News

Recipients of honorary degrees named for 2011

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A diverse group of nine public figures including a former president, an Emmy Award-winning actress, a Native American activist, and two notable Dartmouth alumni will be awarded honorary degrees by the College at the Class of 2011's Commencement exercises on June 11, according to Justin Anderson, director of media relations for the College. Former President George H.W.


News

Sororities announce new policy

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Correction appended The eight presidents of Dartmouth's Panhellenic sororities unanimously decided that their houses will boycott all social events held in conjunction with a fraternity in which a member has assaulted a female student if internal adjudication is not taken against the individual in a timely manner, Sigma Delta sorority president Danielle Levin '12 said in an interview with The Dartmouth.


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Arts

Majorly diverse art fills exhibit

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DENNIS NG / The Dartmouth Staff The Jaffe-Friede and Strauss Galleries at the Hopkins Center for the Arts have been transformed to a wild jungle of different colors, textures, stories and emotions for this year's senior studio art majors exhibition.


Opinion

Pedde: Myth Busters: Tax Edition

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America is a low-tax country, with one of the least progressive tax systems in the world. In order to permanently close the federal deficit, all we need to do is raise marginal tax rates on the rich.


Sports

Dong's Top 10 From Paris

After spending the first half of Spring term on the Paris Foreign Study Program, I have witnessed several strange and often amusing events in this city of romance.


Opinion

Kim: Dartmouth Dries Up

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At First-Year Family Weekend two weeks ago, my normally teetotaler friend escorted his Danish relative to one of the Dartmouth frats to show her the archetypical American college drinking scene.




Arts

Mashariki transitions from law to film work

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Editor's Note: This is the fourth part in a five-part series profiling several Dartmouth alumni in entertainment and the Dartmouth Alumni in Entertainment and Media Association. Although Zola Mashariki '94, senior vice president of production at Fox Searchlight Pictures, attended Harvard Law School after graduating from Dartmouth and worked in corporate law for three years, she had no qualms about moving on to a lowly internship position at Fox Searchlight. Mashariki was "always interested in film," but she was unsure how to "penetrate" the film industry from a background that did not include film studies. "I didn't really know my job existed, because like a lot of people who think of Hollywood, I thought all the jobs were either for directors, actors or writers," Mashariki said. Mashariki transitioned from corporate law to her production internship at Fox Searchlight by attending the Peter Stark Producing Program, a master of fine arts program at the University of Southern California. "Film was still calling me and I knew if I stayed longer at the [law] firm, it would be impossible to get out, because once you do things like buy a house and start a family it is just harder to give up that income," Mashariki said. Over the last 11 years, Mashariki has risen to her current position and has worked on a number of feature films, including Mark Romanek's "Never Let Me Go" (2010), Sanaa Hamri's "Just Wright" (2010), George Tillman Jr.'s "Notorious" (2009) and Tamara Jenkins' "The Savages" (2007). "I didn't know a lot about film but [former president of Fox Searchlight Peter Rice] said he wanted me to join his staff, saying I would either sink or swim, so I spent my first year trying to figure it out, and I still am," Mashariki said. Mashariki has spoken on several Dartmouth Alumni in Entertainment and Media Association panels, as her path is a good example for undergraduates who want to enter the corporate side of the film industry. While at the College, Mashariki, a sociology major and theater minor, won the Eleanor Frost and Rush & Loring Dodd Annual Playwriting Festival and was a member of Casque and Gauntlet senior society.



News

Minority applications climb by 27 percent

In addition to a 19-percent increase in overall applicants to the Class of 2015, the College saw a 27-percent rise in minority applicants and a 24-percent rise in international applicants this year, according to Director of Admissions Outreach James Washington.


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News

Pelzel analyzes trends in non-profit donations

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LOTTA NYGREN / The Dartmouth The biggest challenges non-profits face today are "earning trust and investment," Senior Vice President for Advancement Carolyn Pelzel said in a lecture in Silsby Hall on Tuesday evening. Speaking to an audience of trustees for non-profit organizations in the Upper Valley, Pelzel said she believes that non-profit organizations could be doing a better job of impressing donors.


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Sports

Baseball looks to promising future

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Nicholas Root / The Dartmouth Staff The Dartmouth baseball team entered the 2011 season with high expectations, returning much of the squad that won the team's second straight Ivy League championship in 2010.


News

Researchers find traces of radiation

Dartmouth researchers discovered that harmless levels of radioactive materials are present in Hanover as a result of the Japanese nuclear reactor explosions that occurred after the March 11 earthquake almost 10,000 miles from campus, according to earth sciences professor Joshua Landis.