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(07/27/07 7:58am)
One hundred eighty-four students had submitted over 1,400 resumes through Monstertrak, Career Service's online resume submission portal as of Tuesday. This represents a huge jump in student interest from previous Summer term recruitment. This summer also saw a slight increase in the number of employers who were interested in recruiting Dartmouth students, bringing the total this year to around 20. The firms in attendance represented the fields of finance, consulting, media and law. Finance firms were the most heavily represented.
(06/27/07 1:09am)
For ORL, which picked up the bins each day during the final days of Spring term, the project meant the office would no longer have to deal with fees associated with disposing of all the clothes left behind by Dartmouth students. Daily pickup of donations ensured that students could not rifle through and damage the items.
(06/26/07 6:53am)
For ORL, which picked up the bins each day during the final days of Spring term, the project meant the office would no longer have to deal with fees associated with disposing of all the clothes left behind by Dartmouth students. Daily pickup of donations ensured that students could not rifle through and damage the items.
(11/08/06 11:00am)
In Tuesday night's election New Hampshire voters turned out in higher than usual numbers to defeat six-term incumbent Charlie Bass '74 (R-N.H), electing Democratic challenger Paul Hodes '72 to the U.S. House of Representatives. Other Republican Dartmouth alumni were defeated as well in New Jersey, Minnesota and Vermont.
(11/07/06 11:00am)
Among those candidates involved in close races is Thomas Kean Jr. '90 (R-N.J.), who is challenging incumbent Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) for New Jersey's U.S. Senate. Kean, who comes from a long line of popular family politicians, has previously served in the New Jersey Legislature. His most recent position was the Senate Minority Whip, a position that he holds to this day.
(11/03/06 11:00am)
With only four days until Election Day the College Republicans and the College Democrats have stepped up their get-out-the-vote efforts by registering voters, manning phone banks around the state and going door-to-door talking to voters.
(10/25/06 9:00am)
As part of its effort to combat the flu virus this winter, the Dartmouth College Health Service held this year's first influenza vaccination clinic Tuesday in Tindle Lounge. While the clinic was designated for faculty and staff members only, three of the four remaining sessions, to be held over the next several weeks, will offer the vaccine to students.
(10/11/06 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the second in a two-part series that examines credit cards and student debt at both a national level and at Dartmouth.
(10/10/06 9:00am)
Editor's Note: This is the first in a two-part series that examines credit cards and student debt at both a national level and at Dartmouth.
(09/25/06 9:00am)
A slew of Democratic and Republican national officeholders recently visited the Granite State, home of the influential first-in-the-nation presidential primary.
(09/20/06 9:00am)
All freshmen have now moved into their residence halls after a five-day delay in obtaining occupancy permits for three of the six buildings in the McLaughlin residence hall cluster forced many students returning from their Dartmouth Outing Club Trips to temporarily move into other residence halls.
(05/30/06 9:00am)
More medical care does not result in better outcomes for chronically ill patients, according to Dartmouth Medical School researchers. Dr. John Wennberg and his co-author, Dr. Elliott Fisher, published a study calling for a complete reevaluation of how the nation manages chronic illness.
(05/17/06 9:00am)
One-fifth of all medications prescribed by in-office physicians are prescribed for uses not explicitly approved by the Food and Drug Administration, according to a recent study conducted by Ph.D. candidate David Radley at Dartmouth Medical School's Center for Evaluative Science. He also found that in three-fourths of those situations there was little or no scientific evidence to support the medication's usage.
(05/10/06 9:00am)
The women shared personal anecdotes dealing with issues ranging from depression and pregnancy to their own conflicted racial and sexual identities.
(05/08/06 9:00am)
The Italian department announced last week that it would cancel its Fall term LSA+ forcing all seven participants to alter their Dartmouth Plans. The program was canceled due to understaffing in the department and an Office of Off-Campus Programs rule stipulating a minimum number of eight students to hold a program.
(05/05/06 9:00am)
The 28th annual Festival of New Music will take place at Dartmouth beginning this Saturday. The festival's inspiration came when students expressed a desire to be exposed to different types of music not necessarily found in the classroom, and will bring students, professors and composers together to celebrate experimental music.
(05/03/06 9:00am)
All women should seek cancer screening tests such as mammograms, pap tests and colorectal screenings on a yearly or bi-yearly basis, according to the U.S. Preventive Services task force. But many American women, especially in low income or minority groups, do not receive this essential preventative care.
(04/21/06 9:00am)
Hannah Murnen '06, Augusta Niles '07, Deborah Sperling '06 and Nathan Sigworth '07 invented the Gyrobike, which corrects for the "falling feeling" experienced by first time bike riders, after being assigned to build a toy for teaching and learning during their Fall 2004 Engineering 21 class.
(04/11/06 9:00am)
Wright was asked to speak at the conference because of Dartmouth's well known commitment to diversity, he said.
(04/04/06 9:00am)
Recent movements urging consumers to reduce the country's dependence on oil by using an ethanol-gasoline combination to power their vehicles may be strengthened by a new process invented at Dartmouth. In response to the high costs of producing ethanol, which is made from corn and other grain products, current Thayer professor Lee Lynd and former Thayer researcher Y.H Percival Zhang have developed a new, cost-effective ethanol pretreatment process that could eventually help the United States break its dependence on foreign oil.