Daily Debriefing
Plans for a doctoral program funded by a $17 million donation from JPMorgan Chase at the University of Delaware raised some concerns among the university's faculty, Inside Higher Ed reported.
Plans for a doctoral program funded by a $17 million donation from JPMorgan Chase at the University of Delaware raised some concerns among the university's faculty, Inside Higher Ed reported.
The U.S. government may be out of operation this week, but luckily we have been deemed a "necessary government service" and are still running.
Natalie Cantave / The Dartmouth Staff In a disappointing weekend on the road in Philadelphia, the field hockey team fell to No.
If you were anywhere in the Hopkins Center last Thursday before the "Igniting Unity" show in Spaulding Auditorium, you would have witnessed a certain brand of controlled chaos.
Schools' increased use of software to collect middle and high school students' academic and personal information has prompted a debate over how student data should be gathered and who should be allowed to see it, The New York Times reported on Saturday.
It was 10 a.m. on Saturday, and the mist had just risen off the Connecticut River. The usual sights and sounds were present: rowers paddling boats through the calm water and cars and trucks humming across the Ledyard Bridge.
Natalie Cantave / The Dartmouth Staff The volleyball team's losing streak ran to five games this past weekend, dropping a heartbreaker in five sets to Brown University before falling in straight sets to Ivy League-leading Yale University on Saturday. Despite an 0-2 weekend, the volleyball team had a historic road trip as co-captain Elisa Scudder '14 set the program's blocking record.
A female undergraduate student reported that she was sexually assaulted in her room at 1:00 a.m. on Sunday morning, according to a campus alert from Safety and Security director Harry Kinne. A college-aged male who is not enrolled at the College reportedly forced his way into the student's residence hall and room.
Margaret Rowland / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Dartmouth lost to the University of Pennsylvania in the longest footballgame in Ivy League history, after Penn junior Kyle Wilcox scored a 20-yard run on third down in the fourth overtime in Dartmouth's first overtime game in three years. Penn (2-1, 1-0 Ivy) snapped Dartmouth's (1-2, 0-1 Ivy) seven-game road winning streak by beating Dartmouth for the sixth straight year.
\n Josh Renaud \nNote to readers (May 23, 2014): When The Dartmouth found thatJake Bayer '16 had fabricated a quotation, wedecided to remove his articles from our website.\n For a full statement, clickhere.
Why students should be able to view past course reviews
Making the best of sophomore year while it lasts
The men's and women's cross country teams both finished second in the Paul Short Invitational at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pa., this weekend.
Dani Wang / The Dartmouth Staff Both the men's and the women's rugby teams were triumphant in their Ivy League matches on Saturday morning.
Katie Trinh / The Dartmouth Over 125 students, a record-high, participated in Saturday's fourth annual Day of Caring, a half-day program during which community members participate in service projects across the Upper Valley.
This week, I sat down with Duncan Robinson '16, a reliever on the baseball team. Although the season does not begin until the spring, the team is already hard at work, returning to Hanover for its abbreviated fall schedule. Where did you play baseball this summer? DR: I played back home in Houston.
Julietta Gervase / The Dartmouth Coed rush concluded this weekend, though most coed fraternities and societies have more fluid procedures for membership than those of formal sorority and fraternity rush. Six students accepted bids at Alpha Theta coed fraternity, which uses a formal process, and four new members joined Amarna undergraduate society, whose membership is rolling.
In one whirlwind day, students hurried to write and produce original plays in which the main characters could only speak in movie, song, play and book titles.
Kelley Lin / The Dartmouth Since college athletics became a lucrative business, there has been constant debate about what constitutes an amateur student-athlete.