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The Ritual of Breath

The Ritual of Breath Is the Rite to Resist

The transdisciplinary opera comes to New York City as a creative act of resistance on the 10th anniversary of Eric Garner's killing.

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On the Connecticut River

Simon Lamontagne

Portrait of Simon Lamontagne

Hey everyone! I'm Simon, a '24 from Lakewood, CO. Outside of class and the Admissions office, where I'm a tour guide and Senior Fellow, you can find me getting involved with campus music groups, spending time with friends at my gender-inclusive Greek house, on a walk in Pine Park, or meticulously tracking my Spotify data. I hope you have lots of fun exploring Dartmouth with me!

Academic Program 

Linguistics major, English and Anthropology minor

Favorite Thing Right Now 

Othello (the board game, not the Shakespeare play)

Hometown 

Lakewood, CO

Pronouns 

You are here.

  • People Places Pines

My English Minor!

Simon's d-plan, fall hanover, nh.

I'd known since middle school that I wanted to major in linguistics, but this was my first chance to take a formal linguistics class, and I absolutely couldn't wait! "An introduction to the scientific description of human language," my (virtual, it was fall 2020) LING 1 class covered phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, sociolinguistics, language revitalization, and so much more! Prof. Coto-Solano couldn't have been a better introduction to Dartmouth linguistics; he's one of the kindest people I've ever met and, of course, unbelievably knowledgeable.

Winter Hanover, NH

But really, is a hot dog a sandwich? It's all just semantics; take this class to find out! Another Zoom favorite of mine, Prof. Pulju made every day in this course entertaining. I learned so much about the vast changes in perception and meaning that can come from the tiniest change in wording that most people don't even consciously pick up on. I wrote a final paper investigating the gray area between different past tenses in French--classic word nerd stuff, but so much fun.

Spring Hanover, NH

As a queer language nerd, this course naturally landed squarely at the intersection of my interests. This was my final virtual term at Dartmouth, and Prof. Billings made it a great one! We discussed the ways quotidian language use reinforces misogyny and transphobia, as well as the nuances of negotiating various iterations of femininities and masculinities through language--we all mediate our genders through language every single day, mostly in ways we don't even notice. The highlights were definitely presenting to the class on language and gender in Dorian Electra's "Flamboyant" and coming to a new understanding of my own identity through the sociolinguistic discussions we had throughout the course.

Summer Morrison, CO

Still amidst the pandemic, I spent my freshman summer at home with my family and working a food service job. Outside of work, I had the chance to let the chaos and intense learning experience that was my first year settle behind me and reflect on how I wanted to shape my Dartmouth experience going forward. My freshman roommate, who's from Massachusetts and I've stayed close with to this day, visited me in Colorado, and I had so much fun showing them around! At the end of the summer, I went back to Hanover a little early to serve as an Orientation Leader and had a great time getting to know the 25s and helping them through their first days on campus in various capacities.

This six-person class with Prof. Stanford was one of the coolest classes I've taken throughout my whole time at Dartmouth. We spent the entire term learning linguistic field methods by doing collaborative research on the Georgian language alongside another Dartmouth student who's a native speaker of the language! I wrote a 45-page paper for this class on Georgian morphosyntax and really enjoyed it; finishing that paper was one of the most fulfilling moments of my Dartmouth career. The small class size was a wonderful chance to bond extensively with my classmates, and I also appreciated the challenge of being the only 24 in the course alongside more experienced Linguistics majors, from whom I learned so much.

This was my first English class at Dartmouth, and the one that made me decide to declare an English minor. Prof. Stuelke, who's fantastic and inspired me to take another class with her (Contemporary American Fiction) my sophomore summer, assembled a brilliant syllabus that introduced us to an array of artistic activism traditions across time and geography. We read theory alongside memoirs, and examined photography and film alongside poetry and painting. Our final project was to create political art of our own, and I had the chance to photograph a number of trans and non-binary Dartmouth students as an exploration of stereotype, homonationalism, and transnormativity. I'm still friends with some of the students I photographed to this day, and it was a great joy to hear and tell the stories of so many of my fellow queer community members on campus!

After Field Methods, I had to take another class with Prof. Stanford, and I was so glad I did! This class was the ten-week, more in-depth version of those "pop/soda/coke" maps that you see online. We explored social speech patterns and how they vary (or don't!) across different geographic regions, genders, cultures, ethnicities, socioeconomic status . . . the list goes on. This is one of my favorite subfields of linguistics, and I'd been excited to take it ever since I found out my freshman fall that it was offered. A large component of the class was an independent group research project; my group did a perceptual dialectology study on how L1 American English speakers (randomly selected from the Novack Café study area) viewed the Malaysian English dialect in comparison to American English. The survey results were fascinating, and I ended the class wishing I could spend another 10 weeks on the material!

Summer Hanover, NH

In the spirit of sophomore summer and trying new things, I decided to sign up for my very first film class at Dartmouth this term! I had no prior film experience, but every single day in this class was beyond exciting. The primary focus of the class was hands-on learning; every day, we found ourselves attempting a new cameraless film technique, from bleaching film to painting on it to splicing it together (and so much more)! At the end of the quarter, each student made their own film that screened at an open-to-campus event (complete with movie theatre snacks and drinks)! It felt great to see my work on the big screen when just ten weeks ago, I couldn't have told you a single step of the process that would go into creating that final product.

During the last of my five straight terms in Hanover, I really enjoyed this class with Prof. Huang. I'd taken classes in other departments that were crosslisted with WGSS before, but never signed up for a class that was exclusively in the WGSS department; that changed this term, and I'm so glad it did! The syllabus included "scholars and activists from diverse social and geopolitical positions through coalitions across global, regional, national, and local borders, within and beyond the nation-state." Our readings and topics we covered were just as wide-reaching and varied as they sound, from Palestinian feminist collectives to queer diaspora to disability justice activism in the context of the pandemic. At the end of the course, I got to produce a zine with a classmate as a final project!

Winter Tāmaki Makaurau (Auckland), Aotearoa New Zealand, and Rarotonga, Cook Islands

I first read about the Linguistics FSP as a high schooler, and it was a big part of what drew me to Dartmouth in the first place, so this program was quite literally a dream come true. I can't say enough good things about this FSP and how transformative it was: the first six weeks were spent at the University of Auckland taking classes with seriously incredible Māori professors on te reo (language) Māori and te ao (world) Māori, followed by four weeks spent in the Cook Islands, doing research for Cook Islands Māori language revitalization initiatives at the University of the South Pacific. Our professors and classes prioritized Indigenous history and perspectives in a way that's almost unheard of in the US, and everything beyond the classroom offered boundless opportunities to learn and make new friends, from watching the sunset on Maungawhau and talking late into the night to snorkeling with turtles on the Rarotonga reef. No small paragraph could do this experience justice, but just know that I truly cannot recommend this FSP enough!

I signed up for this course to have more time in the classroom with Prof. Craig, who was present for much of my FSP in Aotearoa, is a truly incredible teacher and human, and co-taught this class with Dr. Mishra. This course featured an unbelievably wide array of unconventional learning opportunities: we attended weekly yoga nidra sessions and were each paired with an older Community Partner to bond with so as to reflect and process both of our life experiences from our opposite ends of the "life timeline." Our small discussion group, which met for the final hour of class each Wednesday evening, was something I always looked forward to, as we were able to be genuine and vulnerable with one another throughout our discussions, something I've never experienced to quite the same degree that I did in this class.

I wasn't taking classes this summer, but I lived in Hanover and worked full-time for Dartmouth Admissions as a Senior Fellow! This summer, I wrote for 3D magazine, recruited panelists for virtual programming, delivered info sessions, started this blog (of course) and so much more. I really enjoyed that every day is a little different in the Admissions office and learning about how different elements of the office work behind the scenes. Best of all, there are always opportunities to meet new people visiting Dartmouth from all over and hear about their lives! I've linked Sydney's blog post above (she's also a Senior Fellow!) for the inside scoop on working for the Admissions office :)

Most Dartmouth students take their non-summer "off term" sometime during their sophomore or junior year. I changed my D-plan a few times and ultimately ended up with a slightly unconventional off term: senior fall! Since it's my last year here, I stayed in Hanover for my off term to be able to live alongside my friends for one of the last few times. Even though I wasn't in class, I was busy. I continued to work as a Senior Fellow and tour guide in the Admissions office (I loved answering prospective students' questions in Zoom student chats this fall especially) and also worked at two Dartmouth Dining Services locations. I performed in the color guard while acting as a co-social chair for the Dartmouth College Marching Band, and serving as both house manager and webmaster for my Greek house.

I signed up for this class as the final one to complete my English minor, and didn't entirely know what to expect going into it. I've been astounded so far by just how much I've loved it--this winter, you'll probably be able to find me alone at my desk with a cup of tea reading Woolf's work aloud to myself. Prof. Orner, who's an accomplished writer himself, is really encouraging us to really spend quality time one-on-one with the readings, and it's been fantastic for the reader and writer in me, but the reflecting-on-life enjoyer in me as well. Woolf's work seems to evoke ghosts a lot, Prof. Orner pointed out recently, in ways I hadn't previously understood to be possible.

The stacks in Dartmouth's Baker library--shelves of books on either side and light coming in through a window at the end of the aisle.

This last winter, I just finished up the final course requirement for my English minor . The great thing about the English minor at Dartmouth is that it's just six courses—absolutely anything you want—in the department, so I really enjoyed taking advantage of the total flexibility by picking classes that were extra fascinating to me personally for one reason or another! A lot of the English courses I've taken here go beyond just reading and literary analysis to incorporate art, creative writing, linguistics, queer theory… the list goes on. Though I'm taking one final department class right now just because I can (CRWT 21: Intermediate Creative Nonfiction); today, I'm going to take you through the six classes I took to complete my English minor here at Dartmouth!

1. ENGL 63.04: Arts Against Empire: Fictions of Revolution and Solidarity in the Americas

ENGL 63.04, which is cross-listed as WGSS 52.04, was my first class in the department back in the winter of 2022 before I'd even decided to minor in English. Above all, this course centered around learning about various activist art traditions across time and space. The book we read that stuck with me the most, perhaps, was Kari Lydersen and Wafaa Bilal's Shoot an Iraqi: Art, Life, and Resistance Under the Gun (I very seriously recommend, at the very least, looking into Bilal's performance art project, which is the primary subject of the book. For our final project, we carried out a political art project of our own; I photographed trans and nonbinary Dartmouth students as an exploration of stereotypes, homonationalism, and transnormativity.

2. ENGL 36: Contemporary American Fiction

Prof. Stuelke taught Arts Against Empire during my sophomore winter and this course during my sophomore summer; I signed up for it primarily because I loved my first class with Prof. Stuelke so much. The syllabus covered Raven Leilani's Luster, Tommy Orange's There, There, Gillian Flynn's Gone Girl, and a number of other stories with accompanying theory readings that we used for analysis. For a second time, Prof. Stuelke gave us a chance to finish the class with a creative project, for which I wrote a short story exploring college campus social life and the notions of neoliberal self-fashioning that we'd discussed in the stories we'd read over the course of the term!

3. ENGL 47: History of the English Language

This is cross-listed as LING 18, and as a linguistics major, it only made sense to take this during my junior fall as one of the courses for my minor! It was a pretty significant departure from the other English classes I'd taken before this, as it was first and foremost a course in historical linguistics as it pertained to the English language specifically, rather than a literature or theory course (it actually counted for the QDS requirement, for those of you looking for an alternative to math classes)! We traced the development of the language from Proto-Indo-European all the way through modern English, tracking sound changes, morphological changes, and more. Most memorably, though, we ended every class by reciting a passage from Beowulf in its original Old English. I still hear " þæt wæs god cyning " in my dreams sometimes…

4. ENGL 37: Contemporary American Poetry

My second "Contemporary American ______" class at Dartmouth, I enrolled in this course my junior spring with a senior friend who wanted to take a class together before they graduated :) Prof. Moodie gave us so many new ways of looking at poetry, from Mary Oliver to Staceyann Chin, and I had fun writing about Chin and Miguel Piñero's conflicting, yet simultaneously true, portrayals of New York City in each of their work for my final paper.

5. ENGL 63.30: Trans Gender Literatures

I doubled up on English classes my junior spring, so I was in Trans Gender Literatures at the same time as Contemporary American Poetry (yes, we spent a considerable amount of time discussing the space between "trans" and "gender" in the course title—this was, indeed, intentional). RL Goldberg, though no longer at Dartmouth, was a fantastic professor. It was, first and foremost, a literature class rather than a trans studies class, but we did read and discuss a good deal of queer theory as well. What I still think about all the time, though, is the novel I read for the midterm: Nevada, Imogen Binnie's exploration of what it is to be trans, yes, but more than that, what it is to be a mess. I still don't quite have the words to explain the impression it left on me, but I'd certainly recommend it.

6. CRWT 40.12: Novels of Virginia Woolf: Radical Innovator

I finished out the minor my senior winter with my first Creative Writing class at Dartmouth, which focused all term long on the work of Virginia Woolf: more specifically, Mrs. Dalloway, A Room Of One's Own, and To The Lighthouse. I already wrote an entire blog post about this class a couple of weeks into it, but I loved it just as much for the rest of the term! I especially appreciated the chance to blend creative and analytic responses in our papers—it was different from any other writing I've done in a really exciting way. Now that I'm done with the minor, I'm taking one more CRWT class this term just for fun, but I'm so glad the English minor gave me the chance to branch out in so many different disciplinary directions.

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Collis Governing Board Trivia

 May 23rd | 9-10:30PM

DCSA Community Grill

May 25th, 2024 | 2-4pm

Kemeny Courtyard

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Dartmouth to Invest $500 Million in Decarbonization

The Dartmouth Climate Collaborative will reduce campus emissions 100% by 2050.

Baker Library and Dartmouth Hall tower

Dartmouth Launches Climate Futures Initiative

In a message to the community on Earth Day, President Sian Leah Beilock announced the launch of the Dartmouth Climate Collaborative , a comprehensive commitment to meaningfully address climate change and sustainability on campus and beyond. 

The plan calls for investments of more than $500 million in the next five years to accelerate campus decarbonization efforts and meet new targets for reducing carbon emissions on campus by 60% by 2030 and 100% by 2050—the largest investment in sustainability in Dartmouth history.

“Our aging infrastructure—some of which is more than 100 years old—is in dire need of repair, and rather than sinking resources into an outdated system, we will take this opportunity to reduce our carbon footprint in a lasting way,” President Beilock says.

Major upgrades around campus will include improvements to energy efficiency, the continued transition from steam to hot water heating, and the installation of geo-exchange borefields and high-capacity heat pumps “in order to aggressively reduce our greenhouse gas impact,” she says.

Our campus will become a living lab as our capital projects become drivers of new research, teaching, and collaboration.

The Climate Collaborative will not stop at addressing campus infrastructure. 

“As a leading research university, our responsibility to address climate change goes far beyond the carbon footprint on campus,” Beilock says. “As we embark on the largest operational change in Dartmouth’s history, our campus will become a living lab as our capital projects become drivers of new research, teaching, and collaboration. Critical to this will be our students, whose passion and creativity have helped spur our aggressive push around campus decarbonization.”

Several efforts toward the collaborative’s educational goals are already underway, including the recently announced Climate Futures Initiative —which Beilock describes as a year-long program to “help ensure we capitalize on areas where Dartmouth is best positioned to drive climate scholarship and solutions”—and the Greenshot Accelerator , a partnership of the Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society , Magnuson Center for Entrepreneurship , Tuck School of Business , and Thayer School of Engineering that is supporting climate entrepreneurs.

The Dartmouth Climate Collaborative will have an advisory council that includes faculty, students, alumni, and a representative from the Sustainable Hanover community group. The council will be co-chaired by Professor of Anthropology Laura Ogden , who is serving as the special advisor to the provost on climate and sustainability, and Rosi Kerr ’97 , director of the Sustainability Office .

The advisory council will report to Provost David Kotz ’86 and Senior Vice President for Capital Planning and Campus Operations Josh Keniston .

The community is gathering on Tuesday, April 23, at Collis Common Ground for a Celebrating Dartmouth’s Climate Commitment event, where several faculty, senior leaders, and students will share why they’re excited about the future of climate action and study at Dartmouth. A livestream will be available.

“As the effects of climate change become more and more pronounced, Dartmouth must meet the moment. Maintaining the status quo is not an option, nor is incremental change. The time for bold action is now,” Beilock says.

The Office of Communications can be reached at  [email protected] .  

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KARMA AND EVIL - Philosophy/Hinduism WTCH Seminar Series

The problem of evil is one of the most famous objections to the truth of religious belief. How can a good god create a world with so much evil? In this seminar, explore the Hindu doctrine of karma and reincarnation and how these philosophical ideas can rebut the problem of evil. NO PRIOR EXPERIENCE/READING REQUIRED.  This event is part of Philosophy Club's Spring Hinduism Seminar Series and the Equity, Diversity, and Intercultural Programs Office's World Touch Cultural Heritage Series. 

Event Types

Event audience, virtual tour.

Give our virtual tour a try. You can discover the beauty of campus right from your computer, phone, or tablet.

  • Anishinaabe Summer Language Immersion

IMAGES

  1. Dartmouth College

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

  2. Explore Dartmouth's Changing Campus Through a Virtual Tour

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

  3. Campus Tours

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

  4. Explore Dartmouth's Changing Campus Through a Virtual Tour

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

  5. University of Massachusetts Dartmouth (UMass Dartmouth)

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

  6. Experience Dartmouth College in Virtual Reality

    dartmouth university virtual campus tour

VIDEO

  1. DARTMOUTH CAMPUS TOUR 2023 (R-RATED)

  2. A Typical Friday at Dartmouth College

  3. Talbot Campus: 1 minute tour

  4. Dartmouth Academy Secondary Virtual Tour

  5. Dartmouth Academy Primary Virtual Tour

  6. Dartmouth College Tour

COMMENTS

  1. Campus Tours

    11:30 Rauner Library — Special Collection and the Arts. 13:28 The Irving Institute — Sustainability and Interdisciplinary Research. 15:50 Engineering and Computer Science Center — The Liberal Arts and Academics. 22:22 Baker-Berry Library — Academic Resources and Advising. 24:36 Fahey Hall — Residential and Greek Life On Campus.

  2. Take A Virtual Tour of Campus

    The main Dartmouth campus stretches across 269 acres, including undergraduate and graduate schools, athletic and arts complexes, and nature preserves. Starti...

  3. Admissions Calendar & Virtual Event Sign-up

    Virtual Information Sessions (45 minutes) - Select Mondays at 7:00 p.m. and Thursdays at 9:00 a.m. during the academic term, featuring current students in a live virtual setting. Virtual Campus Tours (75 minutes) - Select Tuesdays at 9:00 a.m. and Wednesdays at 3:00 p.m. during the academic term, led by current students in a live virtual setting.

  4. Dartmouth Virtual Campus Tour

    Explore our campus with our tour guides Emil '25, Mariya '25, Michaela '25, and Simon '24.00:04 Meet Your Tour Guides02:43 Indigenous Excellence and Academic...

  5. Visit

    More than 10,079 fans, including an eight-year record of more than 2,000 students, saw Dartmouth defeat Yale Saturday at Memorial Field in a 24-17 overtime victory.

  6. Explore Dartmouth's Changing Campus Through a Virtual Tour

    Explore Dartmouth's Changing Campus Through a Virtual Tour. From the West End to the Arts District and all corners of campus, support for The Call to Lead is enhancing the Dartmouth experience. 9/27/2021. From the West End to the Arts District and all corners of campus, support for The Call to Lead is enhancing the Dartmouth experience.

  7. Admissions Calendar & In-Person Event Sign-up New

    Admissions Calendar & In-Person Event Sign-up. Thank you for your interest in Dartmouth! To display and register for events, select an available date from the calendar. Available dates are highlighted in green. All events are in Eastern Time. In-Person Information Sessions and Campus Tours (1 hour and 45 minutes) In addition, engineering ...

  8. Explore Dartmouth's Changing Campus Through a Virtual Tour

    Begin your interactive virtual tour at the West End of campus, exploring the largest construction project in Dartmouth's history, the $200 million Engineering and Computer Science Center. The Center is the second largest building on campus and only steps away from the 55,000-square-foot Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society, which ...

  9. Tuck School of Business

    360° Virtual Tour. Walk the Tuck grounds from anywhere, anytime. Our 360° campus tour lets you explore points of interest on your desktop or mobile device. Start your virtual tour today. Take a TOUR Interactive Campus Map. ... ©, The Trustees of Dartmouth College.

  10. Experience Dartmouth Athletics in Virtual Reality.

    Open the accessible version of Dartmouth College's virtual experience. Experience Dartmouth Athletics. Virtually explore Dartmouth Athletics in a fully immersive 360-degree experience. Aria doesn't work without JavaScript.

  11. Take a Virtual Tour of Dartmouth College's Beautiful Campus

    In conclusion, Dartmouth College's beautiful campus, coupled with its top-notch resources and facilities, make it an ideal location for academically intense yet balanced college life. The virtual tour beautifully captures its spirit and essence and is a must-visit for anyone interested in experiencing the distinct atmosphere of this Ivy ...

  12. Virtual Tour

    Take a virtual tour of the UMass Dartmouth campus. myUMassD is our web portal, a central location for email, notifications, services, and COIN: Corsairs Online Information.

  13. CampusTours

    Dartmouth College. 207 Parkhurst Hall Hanover, New Hampshire USA 03755-3529 (603) 646-2875. Campus Map. Virtual Tour. Video. Website. VR/Pics. General Information. ... More than 7 Million students have used CampusTours to find virtual campus tours and maps. School Name Search. Search by State ...

  14. Summer 2024

    Hopkins Center for the Arts 4 East Wheelock Street Dartmouth College Hanover, NH 03755. Hop Box OfficeThe box office is located at the Loew Auditorium in the Black Family Visual Arts Center [email protected] 603.646.2422. Box Office Hours: Tuesday-Friday: 12-5 pm Saturday: 2-5 pm

  15. My English Minor!

    Bio . Hey everyone! I'm Simon, a '24 from Lakewood, CO. Outside of class and the Admissions office, where I'm a tour guide and Senior Fellow, you can find me getting involved with campus music groups, spending time with friends at my gender-inclusive Greek house, on a walk in Pine Park, or meticulously tracking my Spotify data.

  16. Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month 2024

    Friday, April 26th | 2PM. Collis Patio. Come by Collis Patio this Friday at 3pm to kick off AAPIHM with free bubble tea! Learn about the awesome events that will be happening throughout the month, pick up free AAPIHM merch, and sign our banner!

  17. Multi-Ethnic Student Programs Graduation Reception

    Visit Campus. Take a campus virtual tour; Admitted Students Guide. Family and Supporters Guide; New Student Welcome Week ... Virtual Tour. Give our virtual tour a try. You can discover the beauty of campus right from your computer, phone, or tablet. ... The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. Contact ...

  18. Six Dartmouth students attend Russian spoken language competition

    "On April 7, six Dartmouth students competed in person and online at the New England Olympiada of Spoken Russian at Harvard University, a one-day event for students to demonstrate their Russian-speaking abilities." -Rachel Kim, The Dartmouth April 25th 2024

  19. Equality

    Visit Campus. Take a campus virtual tour; Admitted Students Guide. Family and Supporters Guide; New Student Welcome Week ... Virtual Tour. Give our virtual tour a try. You can discover the beauty of campus right from your computer, phone, or tablet. ... The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. Contact ...

  20. Dartmouth to Invest $500 Million in Decarbonization

    In a message to the community on Earth Day, President Sian Leah Beilock announced the launch of the Dartmouth Climate Collaborative, a comprehensive commitment to meaningfully address climate change and sustainability on campus and beyond.. The plan calls for investments of more than $500 million in the next five years to accelerate campus decarbonization efforts and meet new targets for ...

  21. KARMA AND EVIL

    Visit Campus. Take a campus virtual tour; Admitted Students Guide. Family and Supporters Guide; New Student Welcome Week ... Virtual Tour. Give our virtual tour a try. You can discover the beauty of campus right from your computer, phone, or tablet. ... The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator and employer. Contact ...