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(02/11/10 4:00am)
Pending discussions with the College and student groups, Hanover Police will delay the implementation of its alcohol law compliance check policy that Chief Nicholas Giaccone announced last week, Giaccone said in a press release Wednesday.
(02/10/10 9:29pm)
Hanover Police will delay implementation of its alcohol law compliance check policy announced last week, pending discussions with the College and student groups, Hanover Police Chief Nicholas Giaccone announced in a press release Wednesday.
(02/02/10 4:00am)
Dartmouth has raised more than $200,000 for Partners In Health in its efforts to assist victims of the January earthquake that devastated Haiti, over $100,000 more than the second-highest PIH fundraising effort at Stanford University, according to Student Body President Frances Vernon '10 and data from the Stanford University Haiti Earthquake Response web site.
(02/01/10 4:00am)
Paulson explains the reasoning behind the decision to bail out Wall Street insurance giant American International Group in his memoir, according to The Wall Street Journal.
(01/29/10 4:00am)
J.D. Salinger, the author known for his reclusiveness as well as his influence on literature, died Wednesday of natural causes at his home in Cornish, N.H., The New York Times reported. Salinger was 91. Salinger was best known for his controversial but highly successful novel, "The Catcher in the Rye," which continues to sell tens of thousands of copies each year in paperback, according to the Times. Salinger fled the high profile that his success brought, however, living in seclusion in his Cornish home for more than 50 years, the Times reported. Dartmouth students often reported seeing him wandering the Current Periodicals Room of Baker-Berry Library.
(01/15/10 4:00am)
"We've been trying our best to keep things going as best we can," he said. "It's just been kind of a recovery effort for the last couple days."
(01/13/10 4:00am)
College administrators are currently deciding whether to increase the size of the incoming first-year class, which will ultimately determine the overall acceptance rate, Laskaris said.
(11/24/09 4:00am)
The two suspects who stole cash from multiple locations in the restaurant during the early hours of Oct. 9 remain at large, Giaccone said.
(11/23/09 4:00am)
Nov. 12, 7:15 p.m. North Main Street Hanover Police received a report of an assault near Baker-Berry Library involving two 19-year-old male Dartmouth students. One of the students allegedly attempted to steal the other student's red hat. After the student wearing the hat had reportedly walked away, the suspect confronted the student again and allegedly assaulted him. Hanover Police is still investigating the case.
(11/23/09 4:00am)
Despite the common perception among students, Hanover Police has no financial incentive to arrest individuals for underage drinking, according to police and town officials. Although Hanover Police does collect money in connection with arrests for underage possession of alcohol, those funds comprise a relatively insignificant portion of its total budget, Hanover Police Chief Nicholas Giaccone said in an interview with The Dartmouth.
(11/11/09 4:00am)
The success of military defense policies depends in part on good resource management, David Chu, former President George W. Bush's undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness, said in a Tuesday lecture at the Rockefeller Center. In his lecture, "The Challenge of Managing Defense," Chu discussed the problems associated with developing effective defense strategies.
(11/04/09 4:00am)
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.
(10/28/09 3:00am)
"It's the ability to work with really all different areas of the campus at the same time," Scherr said of the role of the provost. "It's a very inclusive job."
(10/28/09 3:00am)
While "legacies don't come with provosts," according to unofficial College historian and history professor emeritus Jere Daniell '55, former Provost Barry Scherr's eight-year tenure, which ended on Monday, was marked by strong support for the arts and efforts to secure research funding for the College, according to administrators, faculty and students interviewed by The Dartmouth. Scherr, reflecting on his term in an interview with The Dartmouth, said he sought to facilitate College operations and promote collaboration among all areas of the College "to try to fulfill the academic mission of the institution."
(10/26/09 3:00am)
There were also three arrests for non-alcohol related charges two for simple assault and one for using false identification according to Hanover Police.
(10/16/09 2:00am)
Oct. 7, 10:24 p.m. East Wheelock StreetHanover Police responded to a medical call involving an 18-year-old male Dartmouth student who had fallen off of a skateboard. When Hanover Police officers arrived at the scene, they found that the male and another 18-year-old Dartmouth student with him were both intoxicated. The student that had been riding the skateboard was transported to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, and both were charged with unlawful possession of alcohol. They were given a court date of Nov. 16.
(10/12/09 2:00am)
Two individuals entered the restaurant shortly after midnight Friday and confronted a single employee, Yager said. The men demanded money from the employee, who then gave them cash from multiple locations in the restaurant, Yager said.
(09/25/09 2:00am)
Although the lobbying industry is often faulted for many of the government's problems, lobbyists should not be blamed exclusively, Shaiko said.
(09/24/09 2:00am)
Personal genetic testing, a growing private industry, may not be as reliable as advertised for determining a person's predisposition to common diseases, according to a recent study by Dartmouth Medical School professor Jason Moore and Vanderbilt University professor Scott Williams.
(09/15/09 2:00am)
One of the suspects in the 2007 home invasion in which Hayley Petit, who was to be a member of the Class of 2011, was killed is now seeking a change of venue for the trial citing pretrial publicity, the Associated Press reported on Sept. 9.