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The Dartmouth
April 13, 2026
The Dartmouth
News
News

Daily Debriefing

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Dartmouth students studying on the Asian and Middle Eastern studies program in Fez, Morocco were not impacted by the Thursday explosion suspected to have been planted by a suicide bomber that destroyed a cafe in Marrakesh, Morocco, killing 14 people and injuring at least 12 others, according to Jonathan Sylvia, the Off-Campus Programs fiscal officer.


News

Town discusses plan to reopen swim docks

College officials presented the final plan to reopen the swim docks along the Connecticut River which were closed last summer due to safety concerns at the Hanover Zoning Board of Adjustment public hearing Thursday evening.




News

Events honor alumni contributions

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Correction appended The College's fifth annual Alumni Appreciation Week a tradition created in 2007 to connect students with visiting alumni and help undergraduates recognize alumni contributions to the College features dinners for members of the Class of 2011, a reception with Trustee Bradford Evans '64 and alumni tailgates, Hill Winds Society Alumni Appreciation Week co-chair Yuxiang Zhou '12, said. Alumni Appreciation Week, which began on April 24 and will conclude on April 30, helps educate students about alumni contributions to the College through various planned activities, such as a rugby game tailgate and a postcard signing session to recognize contributing alumni, according to James Barkley '06, assistant director of young alumni and student programs at the Office of Alumni Relations. Although the majority of alumni on campus for Alumni Appreciation Week are class officers, live in the Hanover area or are visiting their children for First-Year Family Weekend, the numerous activities scheduled throughout the week offer alumni unique opportunities to interact with current students and discuss the state of the College, according to Zhou. Approximately 20 alumni and 180 members of the Class of 2011 attended each of the three Daniel Webster Dinners organized by the College this week, according to Barkley.



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News

DHMC settles billing errors suit from 2007

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Aki Onda / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center will pay $2,227,075 to the states of Vermont and New Hampshire and to various federal health care programs as remediation for "documentation and billing errors" within DHMC's anesthesiology and radiology departments, according to a Tuesday press release from DHMC.


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Panel explores nuclear energy risks

Maggie Rowland / The Dartmouth Staff The nuclear reactor tragedies at Chernobyl, and Three Mile Island in Pennsylvania, as well as the unfolding disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi in Japan, demonstrate that the number of nuclear reactors and reliance on nuclear energy in the United States needs to be scaled back, Kevin Kamps, a specialist at Beyond Nuclear an advocacy group that opposes nuclear energy said in a panel discussion at the Haldeman Center on Tuesday. "In the United States there are 20 reactors that are designed in a similar way to Fukushima, including Vermont Yankee in the area," Kamps said in an interview with The Dartmouth. Kamps highlighted how national governments whether American, Belarusian or Japanese have tried to downplay the dangers of nuclear power in response to nuclear disasters. "In 30 years we can phase out carbon and nuclear power and maximize energy efficiency using renewable resources," Kamps said in an interview.



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Prickett discusses upcoming book

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Katharine Pujol / The Dartmouth Stephen Prickett's 992-page anthology, "European Romanticism: A Reader," will "change the field" of Romanticism, with works ranging from Norwegian poems to a full act from the opera "Don Carlos." Prickett, an English professor at the University of Glasgow, presented his work which took a team of 18 editors 12 years to complete in a lecture at the Rockefeller Center on Tuesday. The book which features original works of literature in 14 different languages alongside their English translations was inspired by Prickett's desire to "rethink certain academic structures" and to answer a number of questions related to the study of Romanticism, he said. "There is a persistent question of what Romanticism means, and whether there is such a thing as Romanticism," he said.


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Student may face felony charges

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The undergraduate student arrested by Hanover Police last Thursday for fraudulent use of a credit card is suspected of having spent approximately $10,000 using a Dartmouth student's credit card number, according to an affidavit written by Detective Eric Bates and obtained by The Dartmouth.


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Sandefur criticizes U.S. regulations

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Tina Ma / The Dartmouth The United States government repeatedly oversteps its boundaries and breaches its allotted constitutional powers by issuing arbitrary business regulations, Cato Institute adjunct scholar Timothy Sandefur said in a lecture at the Rockefeller Center on Tuesday. The government's creation of "barriers to entry" including licensing requirements and certificates of necessity threatens Americans' civil liberties by preventing businesses from easily entering the market, he said. Sandefur, the principal attorney at the Pacific Legal Foundation, gave an example of a "barrier to entry" by describing a current case in which he is representing a St.


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Daily Debriefing

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Seven individuals, including four Emory students, were arrested by the Emory Police Department on charges of trespassing the university's Quadrangle on Monday, the The Emory Wheel reported on Tuesday.


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Campus Blotter

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April 22, 11:04 p.m.Webster Avenue A student at Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity placed a Good Samaritan call to Safety and Security regarding an intoxicated student who was sick in the fraternity's basement.


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Canada stresses value of education

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Maggie Rowland / The Dartmouth Staff It costs $5,000 plus academic expenses to support a child for a year in Geoffrey Canada's Harlem Children's Zone, a non-profit organization working to break the cycle of poverty through educational and social support programs.



News

Changes to BlitzMail to occur on schedule

The College has nearly completed its transition from BlitzMail to the Microsoft Office 365 program suite and expects all incoming students to have access to the new system in early May, according to Susan Zaslaw, project manager for the transition from BlitzMail.


News

Daily Debriefing

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The University of Michigan Board of Regents passed a new policy on Thursday extending the "maximum allowable pre-tenure probationary period" for professors from eight to 10 years, Insider Higher Ed reported.



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Rockefeller Center polls voters

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New Hampshire residents remain pessimistic about the nation's economic future and said they would vote for Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney over President Barack Obama in a general election, according to the results of the fourth annual "State of the State Poll" released on April 21 by the Rockefeller Center.