Episodios

  • Coeducation at 50: Special Episode Part 2
    May 22 2023

    It's been six months since we were together in Hanover celebrating the 50th anniversary of coeducation.

    And to keep the celebratory ball rolling, we have two new episodes of the 50 for 50 podcast—featuring interviews with 14 Dartmouth women. 

    In part two, you'll hear from: 

    • Valerie Hartman ’85
    • Lindley Shultz ’87
    • Heid Erdrich ’86
    • Crystal Crawford ’87
    • Anne Schader ’87
    • Rachel Bogardus Drew ’98
    • Alexandra (Xander) Meise ’01
    • Courtney Hall ’02   
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    30 m
  • Coeducation at 50: Special Episode Part 1
    May 22 2023

    It's been six months since we were together in Hanover celebrating the 50th anniversary of coeducation.

    And to keep the celebratory ball rolling, we have two new episodes of the 50 for 50 podcast—featuring interviews with 14 Dartmouth women. 

    In part one, you'll hear from: 

    • Kimberly Marable ’05
    • Joan Marable ’76
    • Amy Cammann Cholnoky ’77
    • Ann Bagamery ’78
    • Annie Kuster ’78 
    • Milla Anderson ’19
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    25 m
  • AlexAnna Salmon '08
    Aug 22 2022

    Growing up in the village of Igiugig in the Bristol Bay region of southwestern Alaska, home to about 70 tribal members, Salmon was always the only student in her grade. She spent happy days at the feet of elders, soaking up language and traditions. Now, drawing on her many-faceted Dartmouth experience, she's documenting the history of her Native community and leading it into the future. 

    As tribal council president, Salmon is helping to launch eco-friendly tribal businesses. She’s also fostering language restoration and overseeing the construction of a cultural center. “We're breaking the mold in every direction as a tribe, and it's so fascinating,” Salmon tells host Jennifer Avellino '89. “Dartmouth set me up for a lifetime, including serving as president of an entire nation. It is the smallest, probably, in the world, but at least it can serve as a model for possibilities.” 

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    31 m
  • Keith Boykin ’87
    Aug 11 2022

    "Gender, race, and Native American inclusion—they were all issues that we struggled with on campus in the mid to late 1980s, in part because the scars from the battles of the past hadn't yet healed."

    As a writer and editor at The Dartmouth, Boykin reported on campus protests, among other wide-ranging topics. And while attending Harvard Law School, he became "an accidental activist." He later worked for presidential nominee Michael Dukakis and President Bill Clinton. Boykin is now a well-known national political commentator, TV and film producer, and a New York Times bestselling author.

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    31 m
  • Selassie Atadika ’98
    Jul 28 2022

    Selassie Atadika ’98 has two lifelong passions: world travel and food.

    She honed in on those passions at Dartmouth, majoring in geography modified with environmental studies—while always maintaining her lifelong love of food. After graduation, she became a globe-trotting, internationally acclaimed chef renowned for her plant-based African recipes. And spending a decade working for the United Nations, she became what she calls a "food ambassador."

    A founding member of Trio Toque, the first nomadic restaurant in Dakar, Senegal, Selassie went on to launch Midunu (which means, in Ewe, "let's eat”), a nomadic dining concept featuring what she calls New African Cuisine. When Covid temporarily closed the restaurant doors, she launched an offshoot, Midunu Chocolates. For Atadika, sustainably grown foods packed with bold flavors and exotic spices tells the story of an entire continent.

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    31 m
  • Bianca Smith '12
    Jul 14 2022

    Less than a decade after graduating from Dartmouth, where she majored in sociology and played on the varsity softball and baseball club teams, Bianca Smith joined the Red Sox as a minor league coach—the first Black woman in history to reach that goal. But Smith refuses to see herself as a trailblazer, insisting that she's just doing what her parents, also Dartmouth grads, advised. "Find what you're passionate about, what makes you wake up in the morning," they told her. So, after earning a dual degree in law and sports management from Case Western University, Smith interned for the Texas Rangers, and ended up becoming a role model for other Black women aspiring to high-level sports jobs. "But this is just the tip of the iceberg," she tells host Jennifer Avellino '89. "I still feel I haven't done enough."     

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    30 m
  • Olivia Goodwin ’21
    Jun 29 2022

    The most recent graduate in our series, Olivia Goodwin came to Dartmouth as a pole vaulter, joined the women's track and field team, and majored in sociology. Goodwin, who uses they-them pronouns, found many ways to help other students feel affirmed and accepted as they explored their gender and sexuality. 

    Serving in leadership roles in the Office of Pluralism and Leadership, the Student Wellness Center, the Dartmouth Outing Club, and the Pride Committee, Goodwin wrote a thesis about how LGBTQ students navigated social issues during the pandemic. 

    Sexuality, Goodwin tells host Jennifer Avellino ’89, "is one of those issues a lot of people don't feel equipped to navigate. The fear of messing up prevents people from trying or getting started with growing their knowledge about it, so I wanted to give students something to make that journey just a little bit more straightforward." 

    They're currently earning an MPH from the Yale School of Public Health, studying transgender population health with a focus on non-binary individuals. 

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    32 m
  • Carmen Lopez ’97
    Jun 16 2022

    Carmen Lopez '97 

    Growing up in the Navajo Nation, Carmen Lopez had never heard of the Ivy League when she became spellbound by a guest speaker at her high school: Dr. Lori Arviso Alvord, Dartmouth Class of 1979, the first female Navajo surgeon.    

    Arriving on campus in 1997, Lopez quickly involved herself in Native American Studies and joined the growing effort by Indigenous students to battle stereotypical language and imagery. After graduating, she earned a master's degree, becoming a teacher. Later, she became director of Harvard's Native American Program. Back home in the Southwest, she now directs New Mexico-based College Horizons, which supports the college and graduate school goals of Native American students.   

     

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    28 m