Inaugural Rassias Award Celebrates Faculty Commitment to Lifelong Learning
Award recognizes Professors Steve Swayne and Don Pease for their contributions to teaching & learning at Dartmouth and beyond, including their MOOCs with DartmouthX.
[more]Award recognizes Professors Steve Swayne and Don Pease for their contributions to teaching & learning at Dartmouth and beyond, including their MOOCs with DartmouthX.
[more]Avoiding antibiotic resistance, Dartmouth researchers develop a new approach to cholera therapies.
[more]Arsenic is a metalloid, with both metal and non-metal properties, and notorious as the almost perfect murder weapon featured in works of fiction including Agatha Christie’s Murder is Easy, and Flaubert’s Madame Bovary. It’s a natural component of bedrock, but certain pesticides used in the past have added arsenic to some areas.
[more]While taking questions from the intimate gathering of graduate students, Aciman spoke of “cheating” as a writer by using empty bits of time. “When do I write? All the time. In between tasks I need to do, or when I’m travelling. Whenever I get the time, really. In other words, I cheat,” Aciman said with a laugh. During an earlier public reading in the Wren Room at the Dartmouth Baker Library, the writer has also light-heartedly joked that he essentially stole from people. “As a writer you cull from everywhere and everyone.
[more]Thanks to advances in microelectronics, the typical smart phone today has more computing power than the first moon lander. Microelectronics involves the fabrication of minute electronic components with features on the micrometer scale or smaller. These advances are known to be slowing, and a collaboration between the Department of Chemistry and Thayer School of Engineering, led by Katherine A. Mirica, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, and Douglas W.
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