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The Dartmouth
April 29, 2024 | Latest Issue
The Dartmouth
Erin Choo
The Setonian
Mirror

Spotlight: Zoe Dmitrovsky '09

Zoe Dmitrovsky '09, along with friend Ben Beisswenger '09, received Tucker funding to spend this summer in Ethiopia volunteering at the Selamta Children's Home.

Mirror

Booze and The Body: Counting Calories

Caitlin Kelly / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Last month, the New York Times covered 'drunkorexia' as the newest form of eating disorder, calling it a growing phenomenon among college-age young people.

The Setonian
Mirror

Kids! Draw your graphic novel!

While graphic novel creation may be up and running in White River Junction, in its burgeoning stages at Dartmouth, students have still managed to produce impressive cartoon works.

The Setonian
Arts

Book Arts gives artistic satisfaction -- and fun final product

It was my first time participating in the Book Arts workshop's open bindery studio, and all I knew about what to expect was that the project of the week was the "venetian blind book," described on the workshop's website as a "fun and versatile book that will delight the beholder, as if opening your blinds to a new day and a fresh beginning." Well, okay.

The Setonian
Arts

Class Divide attempts to instigate tough discussion

Class issues have always interested Lisel Murdock '09. Even as a teenager in Washington state, she was observant of the divides that existed between fellow students; the concept of "some people having to work so much more than others" was both fascinating and troubling to her. Now, as a sociology major and Class Divide Intern for the Hopkins Center, she has put together the Class Divide Student Creative Project - collections of photographs, paintings, stories and poems from different student artists that examine economic and social class.

The Setonian
Mirror

This new house: Habitat helps one family build a home

Richard and Angela Sherman and their children Daniel and Nicole currently live in an apartment that Richard describes as "a prison." It is small and cramped -- "one step from the kitchen to the living room, another step to the bedroom" -- but the lack of space is nothing compared to the grim neighborhood surroundings.

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