‘Panda Toes' blog won Dona '10 international attention
Greg Dona '10 also known as DJ Whack-a-Tone never thought that his music blog, Panda Toes, would become an international success.
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Greg Dona '10 also known as DJ Whack-a-Tone never thought that his music blog, Panda Toes, would become an international success.
11.04.09.news.healthcare
The College received a record number of early decision applications this year, including a record number of applications from international students.
11.04.09.sports.yoga
In
Dartmouth Medical School professor Lynn Butterly, director of colorectal cancer screening at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, will be the medical director for a new statewide Colorectal Cancer Screening Program. The program is funded by a $3.5 million grant given to New Hampshire by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Student Assembly passed legislation to fund advertisements promoting its online research guide during Tuesday's General Assembly meeting. The research guide, launched Oct. 20, provides descriptions of previously completed student research projects and aims to inform students about what opportunities are available. The guide is currently available on the Assembly web site. The Assembly also passed legislation allocating $5,390 to fund the Assembly-chartered bus service between Hanover and New York city during Thanksgiving Break.
Oct. 26, 2:11 p.m.Etna RoadA woman babysitting her grandchild reported to Hanover Police that she had received several suspicious phone calls. While at home with the child, the woman received a call supposedly from Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center informing her that the H1N1 vaccine was available for the child and that she should bring the child to the hospital to receive the vaccination. DHMC officials, however, said that they make no such calls.
Less than 1 percent of the Dartmouth student body 30 students participates in minority Greek organizations, according to a report compiled by the Office of Residential Life. While most of Dartmouth's fraternities and sororities held Fall rush almost one month ago, membership recruitment for the College's minority Greek organizations occurs throughout the year
While minority groups have made significant progress since the civil rights movement in the 1960s, many members of these groups still do not receive the same level of health care as non-Hispanic white Americans, Achebe said.
In the wake of the recent financial crisis, business leaders should work to better integrate public communications into their overall strategy, according to a study by Tuck School of Business professor Paul Argenti and Doremus, a New York-based communications agency. The study, perhaps unsurprisingly, found that the public no longer trusts business executives.
"In terms of high school students out there applying to college, last year represented a peak of baby boomers," Laskaris said. "Families this year could also be saying, Let's wait, let's hold off and get a range of financial aid offers before making a decision.'"
It's been a marathon week for shouting, paranoid lunatics. Just in case global warming, nuclear proliferation, H1N1, drug-resistant bacteria and the inevitable extinction of our sun weren't all scary enough, there's a new global nemesis to face off with: gang rape. Over the past week, countless newspapers, cable news stations and blogs have sounded off on what they think of the gang rape of a student from Richmond High School in Richmond, Calif., and the results are far from surprising America still thinks gang rape is bad. What I find more disturbing is the absurd media attention being given to the case and the exorbitantly expensive "solutions" being proposed.
Nothing in journalism class had prepared me for it. The source I had been interviewing for my very first high school newspaper assignment had just pulled my notebook out of my hands and ripped out the pages containing our interview, shouting that if I wasn't going to report impartially, then he wasn't going to talk to me. I did the only thing I could think of I left, carrying my notebook with jagged margins where my notes had been.
In addition to perfecting their downward dog and learning to stand on their heads and hands, the more than 130 students and Dartmouth community members in Marie Fourcaut's yoga classes might also pick up some French.
The Dartmouth field hockey team extended its winning streak to three with a 5-3 win over Harvard (5-10, 2-4 Ivy) Saturday, a game that saw Kelly Hood '12 break the College record for most points in a season.
A Nabokovian "Gossip Girl" that is refreshingly smart in how it is less about the labels and more about the lust exhibited by students and teachers, Joshua Gaylord's debut novel "Hummingbirds," which was released on Oct. 6, chronicles the "glowing daughters of the social elite" at Carmine-Casey, an all-girls school on the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
Over 1,600 students submitted early decision applications for the Dartmouth Class of 2014 a record high and a 3-percent increase over the number submitted last year, the College announced in a statement late Tuesday.The number of applications increased by about 13 percent for the Class of 2013.