Vernon '10: Dartmouth must embrace change
BEN GETTINGER / The Dartmouth Staff Student Body President Frances Vernon '10 urged students to lend a hand in creating "a bolder, brighter future" in her convocation address on Tuesday.
BEN GETTINGER / The Dartmouth Staff Student Body President Frances Vernon '10 urged students to lend a hand in creating "a bolder, brighter future" in her convocation address on Tuesday.
There is nothing more invigorating than a fall television premiere, especially after a drab summer season lacking in fresh programming.
College President Jim Yong Kim said in an interview with The Dartmouth this week that he will focus on improving the public perception of the College's Greek system, noting that the disparity between prospective students' perception of the College's Greek system and Dartmouth students' own experience is evidence of a "public relations problem" at the College. Kim said he hopes to improve the image of the Greek system among prospective students and the general public through his role as "chief advocacy officer." "I think it's very important to let the rest of the world know what an important experience the Greek system provides to more than half of our students," he said. With the departure of former Dean of the College Tom Crady just over a month ago, Dartmouth lost the administrator many students saw as the principal liaison between Parkhurst and the campus' Greek scene.
Years of hot air, sordid affairs, uncivilized shouting matches and general partisan rancor have conspired to lower our expectations for the political process to all-time lows.
Nurses working in the global context must avoid imposing their own cultural views on the communities with which they are working, lecturers at the conference "The Role of Nursing in Promoting Global Health: The Power of One" held at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center on Monday, told the more than 50 nurses who attended the event. "We have to be careful not to become ethnocentric in the relationships with our partners," Devon Berry, a University of Cincinatti College of Nursing nursing professor, said in his lecture.
NEWS ANALYSIS
BEN GETTINGER / The Dartmouth Staff The inauguration of College President Jim Yong Kim on Tuesday drew unprecedented international attention, as multiple Korean news outlets sent reporters to Dartmouth to cover the event.
South Korean President Lee Myung-bak congratulated Dartmouth President Jim Yong Kim on his inauguration as the College's 17th president in a letter to Kim and the Dartmouth community dated Sept.
Tilman Dette / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Global health leader Jim Yong Kim was officially inaugurated as Dartmouth's 17th president earlier today.
Jessica Griffen / The Dartmouth Senior Staff The Dartmouth has concluded its live coverage of Dartmouth President Jim Yong Kim's inauguration, including commentary and photos.
Jessica Griffen / The Dartmouth Senior Staff College President Jim Yong Kim can enhance Dartmouth by drawing on his experience as a leader in social issues, emphasizing Dartmouth's traditions and diversity of opinion, and committing the College to solving international issues, panelists said at "Reflections on Leadership for Social Change," a pre-inauguration discussion held in Spaulding Auditorium on Monday. The informal discussion, moderated by Tuck School of Business professor Sydney Finkelstein, featured several of Kim's friends and colleagues, including Dartmouth Board of Trustees Chairman Ed Haldeman '70, GE CEO and College Trustee Jeffrey Immelt '78, Harvard Medical School professor and Partners in Health co-founder Paul Farmer, Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter and Brown University President Ruth Simmons. Panelists discussed the early experiences that determined the direction of their careers, citing academic mentors as an important resource for students. "When I was a girl, I had the good fortune to walk into a classroom one day and find a teacher who had the ability to show me what was possible in life," Simmons said.
Sitting on the steps of Robinson Hall during this year's DOC Trips, I heard yet another dean invoke the idea of the "blank slate" while speaking to a group of enthusiastic incoming freshmen. What he described was the chance for all students to hit the reset button, start over and begin anew.
Director of Safety and Security Harry Kinne is temporarily serving as interim associate Dean of the College, filling in for Marcia Kelly, who is acting as interim secretary to the Board of Trustees, The Dartmouth confirmed on Monday. The administrative shift occurred shortly before the resignation of Dean of the College Tom Crady, who had been in office for less than two years, and the recent departure of several other senior deans. "I am just on loan to help the division in the time of transition to fill in for Marcia," Kinne said in an interview with The Dartmouth. Keiselim Montas, associate director of Safety and Security, is filling in as interim director. In his interim position, Kinne is in charge of overseeing Safety and Security, Career Services and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Kinne said he has been workingclosely with several of the other deans on a variety of projects. Kinne, who said he expects to return to his role as director of Safety and Security by Jan.
Courtesy of Wikipedia.org I didn't watch the MTV Video Music Awards this year.
Dartmouth is among five colleges and universities that have signed an agreement pledging their commitment to open-access publication, according to a Harvard University Library press release.
ZACH INGBRETSEN / The Dartmouth Staff Hungry for its first win since 2007, the Big Green football team fell to Colgate University in its season opener at home on Saturday, 34-15. The Raiders (3-0, 0-0 Patriot) looted Dartmouth's game, as Colgate rushed for 292 yards and passed for 172 yards.
In the latest issue of Dartmouth Life, College President Jim Yong Kim spoke with Student Body President Frances Vernon '10 about the nature of student protest on Dartmouth's campus.