Woerner: How '15s Can Stop the Cycle
A group of voices is noticeably absent from the discussions about hazing that have dominated Dartmouth's atmosphere in recent months.
A group of voices is noticeably absent from the discussions about hazing that have dominated Dartmouth's atmosphere in recent months.
Christina Chen / The Dartmouth The Big Green defeated Amherst College, 5-2, on Wednesday in a tune-up for the weekend's set of key Ivy League games against Princeton University and Cornell University. Against Amherst (7-4), the Big Green (3-10) built an early lead and held on late, extending the team's home winning streak to 25 games, currently the longest in the nation.
An article in Rolling Stone titled "Confessions of an Ivy League Frat Boy," addressing allegations of hazing at Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity made by Andrew Lohse '12, has been published in the April 12 edition of the magazine, released online on Wednesday.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff If selected to lead the World Bank, College President Jim Yong Kim will have had the second-shortest presidential tenure in Dartmouth's history.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff Following College President Jim Yong Kim's recent nomination for the World Bank presidency, Kim is conducting a worldwide "listening tour" from March 27 to April 9, according to a United States Department of the Treasury press release.
Like most other seniors, I've spent the past year writing cover letters in a desperate attempt to find a job for next year.
Steve Elliott / The Dartmouth Staff *College President Jim Yong Kim's recent nomination to head the World Bank would require him to leave the College after less than three years if elected.
Over the last few weeks, Dartmouth Humanitarian Engineering's hydropower project which currently operates two sites in Rwanda was recognized as a semifinalist in both the University of Washingon Global Social Entrepreneurship Competition and the Deel Social Innovation Challenge, according to DHE president Ted Sumers '12. During the final week of Winter term classes, Sumers and DHE vice president of marketing Alison Polton-Simon '14 presented the hydropower business plan at the Seattle rotary of the competition.
Nathan Yeo / The Dartmouth Senior Staff The various pieces of art currently displayed in the Barrows Rotunda at the Hopkins Center, which range from an intricate wooden skateboard to a sculpted metal ring, are all student creations made in the Dartmouth student workshops.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff Grace Afsari-Mamagani / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Students interviewed by The Dartmouth expressed mixed reactions to College President Jim Yong Kim's nomination to lead the World Bank.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff Global reaction to College President Jim Yong Kim's nomination for the World Bank presidency has been largely positive, as demonstrated by coverage in international newspapers.
Rebecca Xu / The Dartmouth Staff College President Jim Yong Kim's nomination to the World Bank presidency elicited both feelings of excitement for and pride in Kim and the College and a sense of loss among Dartmouth alumni.
End-of-life care in the United States typically focuses on expensive medical procedures to attempt to cure terminal illness.
A report on enrollment at institutions of higher educationshows that the number of students enrolled in college, the percentage of students receiving financial aid and graduation rates have all been increasing, according to The Chronicle of Higher Education.
To the Editor: President Kim makes a poor choice of the World Bank over Dartmouth, forsaking substance for illusion by leaving a truly influential position for a political post atop an ineffectual bureaucracy.
Samantha Oh / The Dartmouth Staff The Undergraduate Judicial Affairs Office has dropped 24 of the initial 27 hazing charges against members of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity in the wake of hazing allegations by former SAE member Andrew Lohse '12 in a January opinion column in The Dartmouth, according to former SAE president Brendan Mahoney '12. The charges were withdrawn after SAE provided "physical evidence that proved specific claims by Lohse false," Mahoney said. Three members of SAE still face outstanding disciplinary action. "We expect all cases to be resolved soon and wish to continue our conversations with the College about hazing," Mahoney said. SAE is also facing hazing charges as an organization, College Director of Media Relations Justin Anderson previously told The Dartmouth.
A Rolling Stone article chronicling hazing at Dartmouth has been published in the April 12 edition of the magazine.
Spring artist-in-residence Ying Li's brightly colored oil paintings and austere charcoal drawings will be displayed in the Jaffe-Friede Gallery in the Hopkins Center from April 2 to May 6, highlighting her many landscape and coastal paintings she made on trips around eastern United States and Europe. Li is currently the chair of the arts department at Haverford College, but she has also worked as professional artist after she moved to the United States from China in 1983.