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The Dartmouth
April 3, 2026
The Dartmouth
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Michal Jablonski '09 demonstrates his four-member student group's product, the Nightrunner, at this year's Big Green Business Competition Thursday.
News

For those who jog at night, a ray of light

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Ryan Yuk / The Dartmouth Staff Runners who prefer to jog at night no longer need to worry about the dangers of limited visibility thanks to a group of four Dartmouth students who have created a product they call the Nightrunner.


The search committee for the next Dean of the College will continue working for another few weeks until the it makes a recommendation to the College President.
News

Dean search committee to decide within weeks

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Lauren Wool / The Dartmouth Senior Staff The Dean of the College search committee plans to make a final recommendation to College President James Wright within the next few weeks, pending a series of on-campus interviews with candidate Carmen Twilie Ambar, whose visit was delayed.



News

Daily Debriefing

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A survey directed by the Tuck School of Business, Executive Education at Dartmouth, Fortune 500 consultant Cali Yost and international market staffing firm Aquent, found that while employees often take time off from their jobs for personal or professional reasons, many businesses find it difficult to adapt to a temporary change in the employee roster.


News

Police Blotter

May 18, 7:15 a.m., Webster Avenue A member of Phi Delta Alpha fraternity threw a piece of furniture out of one of the house's windows early Friday morning.



Laurel Marcus '10 sells baked goods in Novack Cafe on Tuesday night to help raise money for the Hillel Relay for Life team.
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Relay for Life hosts weekend fundraiser

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Larkin Elderon / The Dartmouth Staff Organizers of Relay for Life, an annual fundraising event for the American Cancer Society, say they expect to raise $100,000 this weekend, an increase from last year's $79,000.


The Church of Christ
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Church rakes in $76,000 from cellular companies

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Ryan Yuk / The Dartmouth Staff At a rental cost of $25,200 per year, Cingular Wireless secured space for one of its antennae in the steeple of the Church of Christ at Dartmouth College, which is located next to Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity and not affiliated with the College. This contract, the fourth between cell-phone carriers with the church, is estimated to raise the church's total income from cellular companies to $76,600 annually -- more than 13 percent of its annual $564,000 operating budget, according to Carla Bailey, a senior pastor at the church. "The money that we receive from them helps us to carry out our ministry," she said. In an interview, Bailey spoke of the Bible story of Jesus overturning the tables of money-changers in the temple, a parable which confronts the intersection of commercial enterprise and religion, but said this does not apply in this situation. "Churches engage in all kinds of fundraising activities so that they can carry out their ministry," she said.


News

IFC requires sexual assault training

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Fraternity pledge classes will now be required to participate in sexual assault awareness programming as a result of joint efforts by members of Mentors Against Violence, Sexual Assault Peer Advisors, the Interfraternity Council and Student Assembly.


News

Daily Debriefing

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College President James Wright was featured in an article in Wednesday's New York Times highlighting his efforts to encourage wounded war veterans to obtain a college education.



Stuart Lord, dean of the Tucker Foundation and interim vice president of Institutional Diversity and Equity
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Lord looks to revive Diversity Council

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Courtesy of the Tucker Foundation As one of his major goals as interim vice president of Institutional Diversity and Equity, Stuart Lord is attempting to reinvigorate the College's six-year-old Diversity Council through a series of Campus Climate lunches. The Diversity Council, which is currently rewriting its mission statement, was established in 2001 at about the same time as the Office of Institutional Diversity and Equity.




Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center pediatrician Alan Rozycki '61 illustrates his point on a Rockefeller Center blackboard during his discussion of ethics at a panel sponsored by Undergraduate Judicial Affairs.
News

Alumni tell tales of ethical dilemmas in the working world

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Kawakahi Amina / The Dartmouth Staff Three Dartmouth alumni shared their experiences of striving to maintain personal standards of integrity in medicine, journalism and business to an audience of about 40 students during a Tuesday night panel sponsored by the Undergraduate Judicial Affairs Office.


News

SA to fund retrofitting of vending machines

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Completing a project that has been on its agenda for several years, Student Assembly allocated most of its remaining 2006-2007 budget -- totaling about $8,000 -- to pay for installing Dash capabilities in campus vending machines at Tuesday night's meeting. After allocating just over $1,100 to maintain the course guide incentive program, which funds the raffling of EBAs gift certificates to some students who complete online reviews, the Assembly turned to more pressing matters: the vending machine legislation. Though the original proposal asked for only $5,000, Student Body Vice President Jacqueline Loeb '08 questioned why the Assembly, with only one meeting left to spend its remaining funds, was not allocating more money to the project. As such, Loeb suggested that the Assembly initially allocate $5,000, and then pledge to also provide any funds remaining after the current administration's final meeting next week. "We'll just keep that in mind when funding other projects," Loeb said. Student Body President Tim Andreadis '07 said he doubted that the Assembly would entertain at next week's meeting any legislation that required funding, so the vending machines project will likely receive the remainder of the Assembly's budget. Student Organizations Chair Neil Kandler '09 has spearheaded the vending machines project. "This is something we've been working on for like the last 50 years," he joked during the meeting. Kandler pointed to trouble contacting the right people as the main obstacle that hindered the Assembly's previous efforts. He said he could not predict how many vending machines the Assembly's money would fund. An old estimate of the cost of installing Dash in the vending machines was $500 per machine, but that amount may have changed as a result of newer vending machine models.


Coca-Cola boycotters Eric Espinoza '10, Lena Rochelle Martinez-Watts '08 and Denise Hasson '09 poster Novack Cafe with anti-Coke messages.
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Concerned students boycott Coca-Cola

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Ryan Yuk / The Dartmouth Staff The beginnings of a student-run campaign to raise awareness about alleged inhumane practices of the Coca-Cola company, with which Dartmouth Dining Services is contracted, jump-started this week as the culminating project for a Latin American, Latino and Caribbean studies class called "Latinos in the '60s: Beyond Sex, Drugs, and Rock 'n Roll." According to students in the class, the main contention points are Coke's use of Colombian bottlers who employ death squads to keep workers from unionizing and Coke's privatization of water in India, especially in poor, rural areas. The students' focus is on raising enough student support to provoke Student Assembly legislation requesting dialogue with the administration around the College's contract with Coca-Cola. "We want to discuss what are our options, what should we be doing as a socially conscious campus and working with [the administration]," class member Lena Martinez-Watts '08 said.



News

AD hosts homophobia discussion

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<img alt="Attendees gather around the living room of Alpha Delta fraternity for the house's panel on homophobia, "Don't Yell Fag from the Porch."" title="Attendees gather around the living room of Alpha Delta fraternity for the house's panel on homophobia, "Don't Yell Fag from the Porch."" src="http://static.thedartmouth.com/2007/05/23/photos/1269articlephoto.jpg" /> Ryan Yuk / The Dartmouth Staff "Don't yell Fag from the Porch," a panel on sexual identity at Dartmouth, engaged students in personal discussion about inclusivity issues on campus on Tuesday.


News

Daily Debriefing

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Recent studies have shown that milk may cause acne in women, according to dermatologist Bill Danby of Dartmouth Medical School.