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The Dartmouth
December 14, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

Fund-raising drive on track to meet goal

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Almost a year after its public launch, the College's ambitious five-year, $1.3-billion Campaign for the Dartmouth Experience is proceeding precisely as planned, according to Vice President of Development Carrie Pelzel. "The campaign, at the end of August, hit $601 million, which is exactly on track," Pelzel said.


Sports

Men's and women's golf compete in road tourneys

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Dartmouth's golf teams were both in action last weekend, with the men taking eighth in a field of 12 in the Central Connecticut Invitational in New Britain, Conn., and the women finishing tenth out of 17 at the Princeton Invitational. The Big Green men finished with a 36-hole total of 611, 20 shots behind Central Connecticut State University, who took first by four strokes over Army. Matt Uretsky '07 led the team, shooting rounds of 71 and 78 (149), good for a tie for ninth; Brendan Ray of CCSU led the field with 68 on the first day and 73 on the second, for a winning stroke total of 141. "Matt was one shot under par the first round.


Opinion

An Improved Alcohol Policy

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Over the last week, many returning students have been pleasantly surprised by the presence of kegs in frat basements on nights when the fraternity is not registered.


News

Career fair attracts over 100 employers

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Sporting pressed oxford shirts and cuffed khaki pants, students shuffled up the stairs of the Hopkins Center Tuesday to browse jobs and collect free samples at this year's Employer Connections Fair. The two-day fair, which Career Services organizes each year to give students an opportunity to explore career options, features display booths for more than a hundred employers, including Goldman, Sachs and Co.; McKinsey and Abercrombie and Fitch. Susanne Delaney, a representative of the Peace Corps who has attended the fair for the past three years, said she was floored again by the turnout. "Dartmouth's career fair is one of the best organized fairs, and it is the [best] not-for-profit fair in the region," Delaney said. Liz Acord '05, who represented Cancer Treatment Centers of America, learned about her organization while attending Dartmouth's career fair as a student in 2004. "After dealing with career services at other schools, I'm impressed with Dartmouth," Acord said. Many students shared a positive impression of the fair, which was not as overcrowded as last year's event. "I found it well organized, professional and very helpful," Abigail Adams '06 said. Career Services made a concerted effort this year to attract a wide range of employers, Monica Wilson, assistant director of employer relations, said. Wilson proudly recalled her successful pursuit of three private healthcare consulting firms, as well as a near-miss with major television network ESPN. "When ESPN showed interest, I followed up eight to 10 times, but they declined in the end," Wilson said. Despite Career Services' efforts, some students expressed frustration at what they saw as a lack of variety among the fields represented at the fair. Chris Thomas '06, a mathematics major, said he went to the fair looking for computer-oriented companies but instead found most of the employers were from consulting and investment banking firms. "I don't think computer-oriented companies were present at all.



News

Microrobots show promise in IT, security

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Dartmouth computer science graduate student Igor Paprotny dons his surgical scrubs, latex gloves and safety goggles and steps boldly into a class-100 cleanroom. It's just business as usual for Paprotny, a member of a team of Dartmouth researchers that have spent the past seven years working on the world's smallest mobile, untethered robot, a machine that is only one tenth the thickness of a single human hair. The team, a collaboration between the engineering and computer science departments, recently created the microrobot, which is one to two orders of magnitude smaller than previous micro-robotic systems, researchers said.


Opinion

On Religion

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There have always existed two realms of discourse--the public, where actions are presented for popular consumption, and the private, where individuals are allowed to more or less do as they please.


News

Alcohol use, smoking linked to parents

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Children may form their perceptions about alcohol and tobacco use before they ever encounter peer pressure at school, a new Dartmouth Medical School study suggests. According to the study, conducted by Dartmouth Medical School pediatrics professor Madeline Dalton, childhood attitudes toward alcohol and tobacco are directly correlated with parental use of these substances. Dalton, who has been involved in tobacco prevention for ten years, oversaw the structured observation of 120 children, ages two to six, whom she asked to purchase items for a simulated dinner party from a mock grocery store.



News

Lecture series examines religion, politics

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As faith occupies an increasingly high profile part of public life, academic disciplines at the College are coming together to sponsor a new lecture series on on religion as politics as part of the Dartmouth Centers Forum. Aine Donovan, executive director of the Dartmouth Ethics Institute, one of six interdisciplinary centers involved in the forum, said the topic for this year's events came out of the last presidential campaign. "The idea of religion and politics as this year's topic was conceived during the 2004 election when Howard Dean was visiting campus as the Rockefeller Center's Class of 1930 Distinguished Fellow," Donovan said. Campus discussion surrounding the speech Student Body President Noah Riner '06 delivered at this year's Convocation exercises has made the topic even more relevant, Donovan added. "The recent Riner controversy has served as a great impetus for the whole discussion of religion's role in politics," she said.


News

Gazzaniga to leave for UCSB

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Michael Gazzaniga, one of Dartmouth's most renowned faculty members, will leave the College at the end of Fall term for a full-time professorship at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Gazzaniga, who is widely regarded as the father of the cognitive neuroscience field, will join UCSB's psychology department in the winter and head up a new interdisciplinary center for the study of the mind, UCSB psychology department chair James Blascovich said. Currently the David T.


News

Comic offends some, adds fuel to debate over religion

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Debates over the place of religion in campus and community discourse continued Monday evening as the Navigators Christian Fellowship at Dartmouth discussed a recent comic strip caricature of Jesus. The caricature, which Paul Heintz '06 drew as part of his "Guy and Fellow" comic strip in The Dartmouth, portrayed Jesus as a marijuana smoker and Student Body President Noah Riner '06 as a crusading theocrat in the wake of his Convocation speech. Riner's numerous invocations of Jesus during his Convocation remarks bewildered and offended some members of the Class of 2009 and prompted the resignation of a high-ranking Student Assembly official. In a routine meeting Monday, Navigators officers responded to Heintz's comic.


News

Police charge second man with murder of '07

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Police arrested Christopher Hollis, the second man charged in the murder of Dartmouth student Meleia Willis-Starbuck '07, after a Friday night traffic stop in Fresno, Calif. According to Fresno Police reports, Hollis initially gave officers a false name when his car was pulled over under suspicion of a hit and run.


Sports

Weekend brings mixed results for sailing

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Despite the slight break in activity over the summer months, as the new freshmen class has slipped onto campus with its usual whirlwind, the Dartmouth sailing team has also re-taken the New England waters by storm.




Opinion

The Mixed Message of Hip-Hop

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Sadly but luckily, my first awareness of black people and their culture came from hip-hop. Due to the persistent segregation of Southern neighborhoods and self-segregation in spite of forcible integration at southern schools, opportunities for meaningful relationships between white and black children remain low in Nashville, Tenn.





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