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(04/08/11 2:00am)
Chances are you've faced at least a few of these choices. It's even likelier that there were points at which you diverged from the path and couldn't follow it to the end. Every choice you make at Dartmouth has consequences, and every decision gives people a reason to define you. But many of these choices are superficial, peripheral and largely inapplicable to the "real world." In reality, her penchant for Collis and his fraternity have little to do with the content of their character. Instead of defining ourselves based on a superficial structure (ahem, a timeline), the real challenge is to figure out how these choices fit into a larger context, not just a fleeting Dartmouth reality. After four years, maybe Dartmouth will have completely altered your perspective on life, or maybe it will have just made you more cognizant of who you are but it definitely hasn't created cookie-cutter "types." Then again, what do we know? We're just sophomores.
(04/07/11 2:00am)
Information about ticket distribution will be announced over the coming months, Anderson said.
(04/04/11 2:00am)
This year's conference, organized by Clay and Director-General Jessi Merry '12, was the largest the College has ever hosted, according to Merry.
(04/01/11 2:00am)
What's up with dance parties at Dartmouth? Temperature control, please.
(11/29/10 4:00am)
Superior Court Judge Jon Blue on Friday denied a motion seeking a new trial for Steven Hayes, who was convicted last month of the murders of Hayley Petit, her mother and sister, according to the New Haven Register. In a 12-page decision, Blue rejected defense lawyers' argument that errors by the court warranted a re-trial, the Hartford Courant reported.
(11/19/10 4:00am)
Femininity. The term tends to conjure up images of lips, breasts, hair and high heels. Women who society considers "feminine" tend to fully embrace the attributes that delineate them from men, creating a greater physical, and perhaps social, gender divide.
(11/19/10 4:00am)
*Editor's Note: This is the third part in a three-part series investigating eating disorders at the College.**##
(11/17/10 4:00am)
Binging, purging, starvation, excessive exercise, diuretic use, self-hate: these are the conventional signs of eating disorders. At Dartmouth, 8.9 percent of students reported have experienced an eating disorder or an eating-related concern, according to a Student Health Survey conducted in the Spring of 2010. Under 5 percent of students reported being diagnosed or treated for an eating disorder.
(11/09/10 4:00am)
Almost three and a half years after the deaths of Hayley Petit, her mother and sister, a Connecticut jury recommended on Monday that Steven Hayes who was convicted of their murders this October be sentenced to death for his crimes. Hayley Petit was to have matriculated with the Class of 2011.
(11/08/10 4:00am)
After three days of deliberation, a Connecticut jury has not yet reached a decision in the sentencing of Steven Hayes, who was convicted in October of the 2007 murderer of Hayley Petit, her mother and her sister, WFSB reported. Hayley Petit would have matriculated with the Class of 2011.
(10/29/10 2:00am)
Steven Hayes who earlier this month was convicted of murdering Hayley Petit, her mother and her sister in 2007 has exhibited "suicidal tendencies" and expressed his desire to receive the death penalty for his crime, CNN reported. Petit would have matriculated with the Class of 2011
(10/22/10 2:00am)
Everyone who goes to Dartmouth went to high school. It's the most obvious common experience we've all had. Teachers' pets, senior prom, locker room gossip, pop quizzes we've all experienced that. Or have we? Not if school means taking a test at your dining room table, the cafeteria is your kitchen and your teacher goes by mom.
(10/01/10 2:00am)
New Hampshire is a small, relatively homogenous, generally moderate and overwhelmingly peaceful state. As a proud beacon of these uncontroversial qualities, the Granite State receives a staggeringly disproportionate amount of attention in the raucous and tendentious world of politics.
(09/27/10 2:00am)
Greek organizations suffer from a lack of alumni and faculty engagement, deterioration of physical plants and lack of long-term planning, according to a report on the current state of the College's Greek system by the Dartmouth Alumni Council. The report, released in May, outlined several problems related to the Greek system and proposed a series of measures to help Greek organizations "endure and thrive," the report stated.
(09/24/10 2:00am)
The program, which aims to ease the transition between high school and college, was launched in Fall 2009 as a student-run initiative and originally co-sponsored by the Dean of the College Office and the Office of Institutional Diversity. Micaela Klein '10, who founded the original program, said the success of FYSEP's first year led College President Jim Yong Kim and acting Dean of the College Sylvia Spears to allocate funding to support the program, which allowed additional events before the start of First Year Orientation.
(09/22/10 2:00am)
The trial of Steven Hayes has faced a two-day delay following the hospitalization of presiding superior court judge Jon Blue, according to several media outlets. Proceedings were delayed as fears circulated that the trial could devolve into a mistrial, following the loss of four jurors within the first two days of the trial.
(06/11/10 2:00am)
Since the tragic death of Cody Lavender '10 during his term abroad in Scotland last year, close friends and mentors have mourned the loss of an honest and caring student whom they described as truly passionate about social activism and his studies at the College.
(05/25/10 2:00am)
The College's 91 alumni clubs provide central locations for alumni to maintain contact with the College and develop connections with other Dartmouth graduates. While the clubs aim to enable social networking and inform alumni about College affairs, they have also drawn criticism from some alumni as institutions through which the College can influence College elections.
(05/17/10 2:00am)
A Dartmouth response team of 14 doctors, physical and occupational therapists and nurses left for Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Sunday to reinforce ongoing post-earthquake relief efforts in the region. The team will continue the work of the 25 Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center personnel previously sent to the area, and will try to "plug the holes" in the operations of the University Hospital in Port-au-Prince, according to Virginia Beggs DMS'95, a DHMC nurse practitioner and the team's co-leader.
(05/14/10 2:00am)
At one point a three-day festival complete with a minstrel show and a street parade, today's Green Key weekend bears little resemblance to the holiday's debut in May of 1899. The inaugural spring celebration, then referred to as "Spring Houseparties Weekend," featured fraternity parties on Webster Avenue and a bicycle parade in which visiting women competed for awards such as best decorated wheel and costume, according to a 1899 article in The Dartmouth.