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(04/06/11 2:00am)
Throughout his 41 years at the College, but particularly in the 1970s when "the Middle East was not on everyone's mind," history professor Gene Garthwaite influenced many of his students' decisions to pursue graduate studies of the region, history department chair Margaret Darrow said. Garthwaite, who joined the Dartmouth faculty in 1968 and has become one of the country's leading experts on Middle Eastern studies, will retire at the end of Spring term, according to Darrow.
(02/16/11 4:00am)
Physicians at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center will provide nitrous oxide commonly known as laughing gas as a painkiller for women in labor beginning this summer, according to DHMC obstetrician and gynecologist Michele Lauria. DHMC will become the third hospital nationwide to offer the option, joining the ranks of University of Washington Medical Center and the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center.
(02/01/11 4:00am)
Researchers began a year-long study funded by a $90,000 Active Living Research grant exploring the effects of crime reduction initiatives throughout Manchester on Jan. 15, according to Director of the Prevention Research Center Ethan Berke. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation awarded the grant to researchers from The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice's Prevention Research Center and the University of New Hampshire in December, Berke said.
(01/24/11 4:00am)
College administrators are focusing their efforts on strategic planning and small-scale fundraising initiatives in anticipation of a future capital campaign under College President Jim Yong Kim, according to Senior Vice President for Advancement Carolyn Pelzel. Although Kim is currently operating without a designated capital campaign, the College's strategic planning process led by Provost Carol Folt is currently assessing areas in need of institutional improvement and will likely contribute its findings to a capital campaign agenda, Pelzel said.
(01/14/11 4:00am)
Social media is revolutionizing the way corporations interact with both employees and consumers, according to panelists at the annual "Tech@Tuck" series hosted by the Tuck School of Business Thursday evening.
(01/04/11 4:00am)
The grant funded jointly by the United States Environmental Protection Agency and the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences will enable researchers to secure the necessary "pilot data" to develop the Center's initial research projects into larger initiatives, Karagas said.
(11/29/10 4:00am)
The answer to curing cancer may lie in the capabilities of the human immune system as opposed to current chemical treatments, according to a new study published by researchers at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. The study, published Nov. 15 in Clinical Cancer Research, used tumors found in cancer patients to develop individualized vaccines that induce immune responses to cancers.
(11/12/10 4:00am)
"The army leadership made tremendous mistakes," he said. "The army leadership is responsible for much of the blood that was shed [in Iraq and Afghanistan]."
(11/01/10 3:00am)
Ross, a managing partner at venture capital firm SV Life Sciences, said venture capital has helped to spur job growth in the health care industry and create new treatments for HIV.
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Plouffe also implored students to vote on Nov. 2, hoping to cut into the high voter enthusiasm that Republicans saw in primary elections earlier this year.
(10/18/10 2:00am)
Membership in coeducational fraternities appears to be on the rise, with two of the three coed fraternities offering more bids and registering more students to rush than in previous years, according to Coed Council President Andrew Manns.
(10/15/10 2:00am)
The proportion of potential new members receiving bids 78 percent marks an increase from last year's fall rush, in which 68 percent of women received bids, The Dartmouth previously reported.
(10/06/10 2:00am)
Economist and executive director of the New Hampshire Center for Public Policy Studies Steve Norton indicated that the state is suffering from a structural deficit, and that current sources of revenue were insufficient to adequately fund state services.