Dartmouth College publications
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[edit] The Aegis
The Aegis (pronounced EE-jus) is Dartmouth's award-winning yearbook[1]. Published annually, the Aegis captures the passions, experiences, and perspectives of students during their four years at Dartmouth.
To the ancient Greeks the Aegis was Zeus' celestial shield and was emblematic of heavenly majesty. Today, the word is synonymous with guidance and protection. Its goal, like the shield of yore, is to represent, guide, and protect the splendor of Dartmouth College. The yearbook represents the effort of an entire staff that is dedicated to capturing the beautiful images of Dartmouth College. Each year Aegis staff members attempt to endow the book with the passions, experiences and perspectives of students at the College.
The Aegis' mission statement, as stated in the Aegis Constitution:
The Aegis exists at Dartmouth College because it is strongly felt that there is a need for a pictorial account of life on the Hanover Plain. The Aegis shall not be grandiloquent, but the effort is to be made to capture a bit of the splendor, the agony, the triumph, the discouragement --- the green grass, the white snow, the brown mud, and the uniqueness of personage who find in it all something to carry away. As a piece of worthy public relations and proud memorabilia, The Aegis is a valuable and concrete record of a year on campus. And thus it is that The Aegis helps to save a bit of what Dartmouth is every year. The Aegis occupies a position of traditional luxury, and Dartmouth College has none other quite like it.
The 1994 Aegis won the 1995 Best of Category award, given to the best yearbook in the nation by the Printing Industries of America, Inc.
The 2005 Aegis earned the 2006 Award of Recognition. [1]
[edit] Dartmouth Apologia
The Dartmouth Apologia is a Christian journal.
[edit] Aporia
Aporia is an undergraduate journal of philosophy.
[edit] The Dartmouth
The Dartmouth (or The D) is the campus paper and has served Dartmouth as its de facto news source for more than 160 years. Famous alumni of The Dartmouth include Susan Dentzer, Paul Gigot, Mort Kondracke, and ABC News journalist Jake Tapper, who drew comics for The Dartmouth.
[edit] Dartmouth Beacon
The Dartmouth Beacon is a journal of conservative political thought. The Beacon had some recent changes in its leadership and is currently working on a printing.
[edit] Dartmouth Free Press
The Dartmouth Free Press is a journal of liberal political thought.
[edit] The Dartmouth Independent
The Dartmouth Independent is Dartmouth's only online-based publication. Unlike most other campus magazines that offer political commentary, The Dartmouth Independent lacks a defined political allegiance. Notable achievements include winning the award for best publication its inaugural year, having a host of writers (at least one, possibly as many as three) who can spell inaugural without the aid of spell check, and publishing the definitive history of beer pong. Humor and irreverance are its stylistic trademarks. The Dartmouth Independent releases new issues every week online and in print once or twice a term. The publication can be viewed at www.dartmouthindependent.com
[edit] Dartmouth Jack O'Lantern
The Dartmouth Jack O'Lantern is one of the nation's oldest collegiate humor magazines, founded in 1908. The magazine, which boasts that it is Dartmouth’s “only intentional humor magazine,” is based in Robinson Hall, and its staff has famously pulled off numerous pranks. Many celebrated writers, artists, comedians and politicians began their careers at the 'Jacko,' as it is often called, including: Theodor Geisel (who first took the name Seuss as a pseudonym so that he could continue to work on the Jack O’Lantern after he was banned from participating in college activities for violating Prohibition. After graduating, he felt his alter ego deserved a degree as well, and began signing his artwork 'Dr. Seuss'), Chris Miller (who based his short stories in National Lampoon on his undergraduate experiences at Dartmouth College, and subsequently turned them into the movie Animal House), Norman MacLean, Buck Henry, and Robert Reich. The magazine was referenced in the opening line of F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story The Lost Decade, which was first published in Esquire in 1939. The Jack O'Lantern's website is available here.
[edit] Dartmouth Law Journal
The Dartmouth Law Journal is a nationally recognized journal of legal matters with articles written by professors, graduates, and undergraduates from academic institutions throughout the United States. The Journal is the first and only undergraduate-run journal to appear on the online legal database Heinonline. The Dartmouth Law Journal was founded by Meg Thering and Joshua Marcuse in 2003; it was then known as the Dartmouth College Undergraduate Journal of Law.
[edit] Dartmouth Review
The Dartmouth Review is a well-known conservative publication that is published off-campus without any official connection to the College. Alumni/ae of the Review include Dinesh D'Souza and Laura Ingraham.
[edit] Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Science
The Dartmouth Undergraduate Journal of Science (DUJS) publishes a quarterly journal of scientific articles by undergraduates at the College. Website: [2]
[edit] Montage
Montage is an undergraduate journal of film criticism and discourse.
[edit] Stonefence Review
The Stonefence Review is a publication of student art and writing.
[edit] Squeezebox
Squeezebox is an undergraduate music magazine.
[edit] Word
Word is an alternative literary publication.
[edit] References
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