Valdes brings seemingly supernatural skill to the Hop
"You can't even see his fingers move they're going so fast," Margaret Lawrence, director of programming at the Hop, said prior to the concert. "And to him it's nothing; he just tosses it off."
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
1000 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
"You can't even see his fingers move they're going so fast," Margaret Lawrence, director of programming at the Hop, said prior to the concert. "And to him it's nothing; he just tosses it off."
10.26.10.news.residence
10.26.10.news.residence
10.26.10.news.faculecture
10.26.10.news.faculecture
10.26.10.kesha2
10.26.10.kesha2
10.26.10.sports.wlax
10.26.10.sports.wlax
The recent release of "Whip My Hair" by Willow Smith daughter of Will and Jada Pinkett Smith epitomizes the recent shift in child stars' roads to success. While child stars have been around for decades, the means by which they have gained popularity have varied significantly over the years, from performing on live television to the Disney-characters-gone-pop-star route to the more recent YouTube phenomenon.
Charlie Swan, president of Hospitality Management Advisors Inc. which operates the Lebanon Residence Inn as well as nearly 20 other hotels told the Valley News that the property "enjoyed high occupancy [and] numerous sellout days," making the reasons for foreclosure uncertain.
Although several trustees of the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Clinic hold positions at other organizations related to the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, DHMC Public Affairs Manager Clarence Adams said there are "no conflicts of interest" in DHMC's hiring practices. DHMC is required to disclose all business and professional interactions between itself and its trustees, according to state law.
Delaware State University settled a class-action lawsuit brought by members of the female equestrian team charging the school which violating Title IX, which requires universities to offer the same opportunities in varsity sports to male and female students, the Delaware News Journal reported Saturday, The settlement required DSU to bridge the gap between the proportion of female DSU students 61 percent and the proportion of varsity athletes who are female 41 percent. DSU agreed to increase the percentage of athletes who are women to at least 58.5 percent by 2013, as well as increase funding for women's athletics and recruiting. Members of the equestrian team filed the lawsuit, which later became a class-action suit on behalf of prospective and current DSU female athletes, after facing threats of being cut from the university's athletic program. The terms of the settlement also require DSU to meet Title IX requirements before it can consider eliminating the team, the News Journal reported. If the school decides to cut the team, it must extend all athletic scholarships in the program until the end of the academic year.
N.H. State Sen. Harold Janeway, D-Webster, plans to announce a proposal in November to partially privatize liquor sales in New Hampshire in order to balance the state's budget, he said in an interview with The Dartmouth. Currently, only state-run stores can sell spirits and distilled liquor, but under Janeway's proposal, the government would partner with a private group, which would pay a fee to oversee hard alcohol sales, yielding a net profit for the state.
Dartmouth Medical School psychiatry professor William Weeks who was acquitted of conflict-of-interest charges brought against him by the federal government in April was awarded $800,000 in a settlement with the federal government this week as compensation for "violations of human rights and privacy," he said.
As Kim greeted Monday's audience, he said he is "shocked" by what he has learned about the prevalence of alcohol and sexual assault at Dartmouth, and implored faculty members to use their connection with students to help curb these practices.