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(05/10/11 2:00am)
Paul Argenti, a corporate communication professor at the Tuck School of Business and the panel's moderator, began the discussion by noting the significant and irreversible impact social media sites like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Tumblr have made on the professional world and the general public.
(01/10/11 4:00am)
In 1946, Hillyer founded the Juilliard String Quartet at the Juilliard School in New York along with Robert Mann and Robert Koff, who both played the violin, and cellist Arthur Winograd. Although Hillyer was unsure of the Quartet's potential for success, his father, Dartmouth mathematics professor Louis Silverman, strongly encouraged him to remain committed, Reiko Hillyer said.
(11/18/10 4:00am)
For his new documentary, "This Is Us," Jeremy Teicher '10 combined his English major, theater minor and passion for storytelling to portray the lifestyles, hardships, fears and hopes of Senegalese children. The documentary, which features footage shot by the Senegalese children themselves, had its American premiere at the Haldeman Center on Wednesday.
(11/09/10 4:00am)
The answer, she revealed, was both.
(10/29/10 2:00am)
Gleiser started his portion of the panel by harkening back to 1543, when "Copernicus was on his deathbed." Prior to Copernicus's heliocentric theory, humans believed that God had created humans as the "cream of the crop," Gleiser said. The geocentric theory depicted hell at the center of the universe and, by extension, the Earth making people's primary goal the ascent to the sky, or heavens.
(10/21/10 2:00am)
Pavcnik, who was recently awarded the new Niehaus Family Professorship in International Studies, focuses her research on empirical industrial organization and international trade and trade policy.
(10/14/10 2:00am)
The levels of funding of each of the "three pillars" of American foreign policy defense, diplomacy and foreign aid are deeply unbalanced, Sachs said in his talk, "Ending Poverty in Our Generation: Still Time if We Try."
(10/06/10 2:00am)
This year's first Student Assembly meeting kicked off with the election of James Lee '13, Don Casler '14 and Catherine Treyz '13 as treasurer, secretary and speaker, respectively. Assembly members also spoke about how they plan to work intimately with the College to draft short-, medium- and long-term agendas and attract more first-year students to get involved with these projects. Academic Affairs co-leader Joseph Tanenbaum '13 also suggested that his organization "get faculty and staff on the committee [to work together] to rewrite the [Organizations, Regulations, and Courses book]." The Assembly, which has a $75,000 budget for the year, has started to hold meetings in Collis 101, moving from a classroom in the basement of Carson Hall that Student Body President Eric Tanner '11 said was "too secretive and creepy."
(10/01/10 2:00am)
Contrary to recommendations from institutions urging women to undergo regular mammograms, screening mammography may increase survival rates by only negligible amounts, according to a recent study conducted by Norwegian researchers and published in the New England Journal of Medicine.