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The Dartmouth
December 18, 2025 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
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News

ORL puts students in lounges, off campus

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A shortage of on-campus housing this term forced the Office of Residential Life to place 11 freshmen in converted study lounges, storage spaces and area coordinator offices as one of several measures to provide sufficient housing. Director of Housing Services Lynn Rosenblum said several factors caused this year's housing crunch, including the exceptionally large size of the freshman class, which has more than 1,100 members. A drop in available off-campus programs this year also contributed to the tight situation, Rosenblum said.



News

Increase in vandalism reported this summer

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Although there were no major incidents of crime at the College this summer, many minor incidents -- especially vandalism and bike theft -- kept Safety and Security officers busy, according to Crime Prevention Officer Rebel Roberts. There was an increase in vandalism complaints this summer, including damage to vehicles and campus buildings which included broken property and spray-paint graffiti, according to Roberts. Roberts said she believes many of the incidents can be attributed to non-students who come to campus.



Opinion

Mea Culpa

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Do you remember the soccer player who accidentally scored for the other team during the last World Cup?


Opinion

Lee's Column Hurts and Offends

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To the Editor: I would just like to say that I am absolutely infuriated about the article in the August 17th issue of The Dartmouth by Roy Lee about President Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky.


News

Assembly will have open first meeting

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The Student Assembly plans to invite the entire Dartmouth community to its first Fall term meeting, Student Assembly president Josh Green said. Green said the term's first meeting will be "very public." He said Assembly members will share their ideas with the College community during this meeting and will decide which projects to pursue. A goal for the coming year will be to increase communication to the College community through BlitzMail and through discussion groups, Green said. In the fall, the Assembly will likely present a wrap-up space report, written by former Assembly president Frode Eilertsen '99 and Tom Leatherbee '01, to the College's trustees and will announce its new Student Life chair, a position that remains unfilled, Green said. He said the work of the summer Assembly, chaired by Janelle Ruley '00, has given him "an amazing head start." This summer, the Assembly organized community meetings with Montgomery Fellow Manning Marable, addressed the issue of College fines and tackled student suffrage in trustee elections, among other issues. Additionally, the Assembly organized Summer Carnival and discussed the Visions project with administrators. "It's going to be a busy year just like it was a busy summer," Green said.


Opinion

Lee's Column Hurts and Offends

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To the Editor: I am writing in regards to an editorial I read published on Monday, August 17 entitled, "Are You Nuts?" I am absolutely appalled that an attitude as blatantly sexist rose from a Dartmouth community member, and worse, was given voice in The Dartmouth.





Opinion

A Quiet Summer

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I've heard it said many times that this has been a "quiet" summer. While I personally take exception to that, I think it is true in many ways.



Opinion

The End of Summer

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Okay, how many of you had 99s tell you that the summer is a very chill time, because professors understand that it is summer and therefore assign less work?


News

Dansiger may return to College in January

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Nearly a year after his near-fatal accident on Interstate 89, Adam Dansiger '00 is continuing to defy the doctors who, in the hours after he was thrown from his sports utility vehicle, predicted he would not survive -- let alone recover from -- his injuries. Dansiger said he will hopefully return to the College as a student in January, and he is looking forward to seeing the doctors who treated him while he was a patient in Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center's Intensive Care Unit. "[I want to] thank them for what they've done for me," he said. Dansiger said he has "cognitively made a lot of progress" this summer, and can now walk for short periods of time without the assistance of a cane. He said he avoids walking alone on hard surfaces where he could fall and be injured, but walks without his cane inside his house and in JFK Hartwyck at Oaktree Nursing, Convalescent and Rehabilitation Center, where he is undergoing rehabilitation and physical therapy and is a member of a memory group and an initiative group. Dansiger has had "all sorts of memory problems" since his accident.



News

Jemison excels as astronaunt, professor

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Most people wouldn't describe their college application process as simply as Mae Jemison described applying to become an astronaut: "I always wanted to go into space so I applied to NASA and was accepted." Jemison is a part-time professor at Dartmouth who is teaching a course entitled "Teaching Technology and Sustainable Development" this summer. What about the other part of her time, you might ask? Well, for starters there is her experience with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration where she "worked as a person that got the space shuttle ready to launch at Kennedy Space center for awhile, worked as one of the folks that helped to verify the software that runs the shuttle and helped design experiments for shuttle flights" and finally became the first black woman in Space on September 12, 1992. While in space she investigated semiconductor crystals, how to prevent de-conditioning of the human cardiovascular system in space and intravenous fluid therapy in space. Jemison's experiences before the six years she worked for NASA would be a lifetime full of experience for many others. After entering Stanford University at 16 she graduated with majors in Chemical Engineering and African Afro-American Studies.





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