Forensic Union takes third place
The College's policy debate team, the Dartmouth Forensic Union, took third place in a recent national tournment en route to completing one of it's best seasons since 1993.
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The College's policy debate team, the Dartmouth Forensic Union, took third place in a recent national tournment en route to completing one of it's best seasons since 1993.
Even if Canadian anthropology is a subject little known to most Americans, the discipline plays an important role in helping define Canadian national identity, according to Regna Darnell, professor of anthropology at the University of Western Ontario.
As thousands of demonstrators gathered in Quebec City to protest last week's Summit of the Americas, a group of seven Dartmouth students traveled to the Canadian border to join others in rallying against the conference.
Although researchers have long known that membership in Greek organizations is often linked to heavy drinking, a new study indicates that Greeks are no more likely than their unaffiliated peers to consume alcohol following graduation.
Minority issues have assumed an increasingly important role both at Dartmouth and elsewhere in the two years since the announcement of the Student Life Initiative -- the wide-ranging plan to enhance the residential and social life of the College.
Despite some similarities with the Greek system, the campus' two undergraduate undergraduate societies, Amarna and Panarchy, differ significantly from other societies on campus, abiding by different standards and interacting differently with the College than their Greek counterparts.
In the wake of allegations that members of the house yelled offensive language at a passing student, a Level I adjudication hearing will be held next week to investigate related charges against Psi Upsilon fraternity, according to Assistant Dean of Residential Life Cassie Barnhardt.
In a presentation entitled "Islamic Spirituality: The Inner Jihad," Jamal J. Elias, professor of Islamic studies at Amherst College, discussed the nature of "Sufism" -- Islamic mysticism -- and its relationship to the Muslim concept of Jihad in Rocky 2 last evening.
Last week, in a unanimous decision by the school faculty, Brandeis University became the first U.S. college to create a liberal arts program specifically devoted to the study of the Internet.
In a move that may spell the end for Napster, the popular online music-sharing service, three judges of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled yesterday that Napster must prevent its users from exchanging copyrighted materials.
Whittemore Hall, the newest addition to the campus landscape, opened its doors to residents last month following 18 months of construction.
Jon Velie, of the law firm Velie and Velie, and Frank Velie, of Christy and Veiner, advocated the merits of the ongoing legal battle between the Black Seminole tribe and the United States government as they seek compensation for alleged years of unfair treatment.
With the strong and nearly uninterrupted economic growth of the past eight years, the U.S. unemployment rate is hovering around its lowest level in 30 years and workers have been in increasingly short supply nationwide.
Bob Gienko, a member of the Class of 2001, despite amassing the largest number of votes among Republican candidates, was defeated yesterday in New Hampshire's 10th district in his bid for a seat on the state legislature.
Cecilia Muoz, vice president of the Research and Advocacy Office of the National Council of La Raza, spoke about the problems facing Latino immigrants in the 21st century in the Rockefeller Center yesterday.
Whether you consider yourself a devoted Yankees fan, a die-hard Mets fan or barely recognize who these teams are, this year's subway World Series -- the first in 44 years -- has been difficult to ignore.
Professor Alan Kuperman of Harvard's Kennedy School of Government gave a lecture yesterday in which he discussed the limits of international humanitarian intervention in Rwanda.
Dartmouth education professors Pano Rodis and Andrew Garrod published a compilation of 13 student narratives and 5 scholarly essays this past summer entitled "Learning Disabilities and Life Stories."