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(01/17/12 4:00am)
Religion and cult worship played a central role in civic and political life in the ancient Greek city-state of Kolophon, Brown University classics professor Ryan Boehm said in a lecture Wednesday afternoon in Reed Hall.
(01/13/12 4:00am)
In today's world, international and domestic law are converging to the point that almost no aspect of domestic law is unaffected by international law, according to Hathaway.
(01/10/12 4:00am)
As of Monday night, 37 percent of voters planning to vote in the Republican primary were undecided, government professor Linda Fowler said.
(11/21/11 4:00am)
Called the "Toms Shoes of electricity" by technology website Gizmodo, the LuminAID a portable, inflatable solar lamp designed by Anna Stork '08 is generating excitement and funding from both outdoor enthusiasts and international disaster relief organizations, Stork said in an interview with The Dartmouth. LuminAID employs a "give one, get one" model, similar to that used by Toms, in which customers pay $25 to buy a LuminAID lamp for themselves and send one to individuals across the globe who would otherwise be unable to afford lighting, Stork said.
(11/10/11 4:00am)
Homophobic and derogatory remarks were scrawled on a window on the ground floor common room in the Fahey-McLane Residence Hall early Sunday morning, according to Rohail Premjee '14, who discovered the writing at approximately 3:15 a.m. that day. The vandalism, which was located adjacent to the gender-neutral floor, has spurred concern in the bisexual, gay, lesbian and transgender community. Gender-neutral hall residents are worried that the incident reveals negative undertones towards LGBT students on campus, various residents said in interviews with The Dartmouth.
(11/09/11 4:00am)
Melting Arctic ice has opened up new shipping routes and access to natural resources such as gas, oil and uranium, Taksoe-Jensen said. Uncharted waters and an abundance of ice make the Arctic a dangerous place to sail, he said, though the current melting ice makes the transportation route more viable.
(11/02/11 3:00am)
Nearly half of primary care physicians believe that they or their colleagues are over-providing health care to their patients, according to a recent study conducted by Dartmouth Medical School professor Brenda Sirovich published in the Archives of Internal Medicine.
(10/26/11 2:00am)
Native American small business owners and entrepreneurs from across the country traveled to Bismark, N.D., on Tuesday to participate in a threeday conference on business strategy hosted by Tuck School of Business management professor Leonard Greenhalgh. The conference is a "three-day concentrated learning experience" for management teams of native-owned businesses, and just one of many Tuck professor-sponsored events each year for approximately 40 to 70 Native Americans looking to improve their business practices, Greenhalgh said in an interview with The Dartmouth.
(10/21/11 2:00am)
Bonfire bliss may take center stage during Homecoming, but the arrival of the first big weekend of the year provides plenty of side-show activities across campus, according to Collis Programming Coordinator Danielle Lajoie, The College will host events in addition to Friday night's bonfire lighting in order to involve students, especially members of the Class of 2015, in weekend traditions, Lajoie said,
(10/21/11 2:00am)
Progress made in the field of tobacco control is "probably the greatest public health success story of the past half century," Kenneth Warner '68, former dean of the University of Michigan School of Public Health, said in the second annual C. Everett Koop Institute Lecture at the Norris Cotton Cancer Center on Thursday afternoon.
(10/18/11 2:00am)
The Hanover Fire Department responded to a notification of a fire at the Roth Center at approximately 11 a.m. on Monday, according to firefighter Bob Mousley. Upon arrival, firefighters determined that there was no fire in the building but discovered a problem with one of the sprinklers in the building's basement, which had set off the automatic dispatch system, Mousley said. There was minor water damage around the area where the sprinkler was activated, according to Mousley.
(10/17/11 2:00am)
Fareed Zakaria, editor-at-large of Time magazine and a CNN correspondent, will speak at Harvard University's Commencement ceremony, The Harvard Crimson reported on Friday. Zakaria was chosen because he is "an unusually creative and incisive thinker in the realm of international affairs," Harvard President Drew Faust said in a statement. Zakaria, who obtained a PhD from Harvard's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, was described by Esquire Magazine in 1999 as "the most influential foreign policy adviser of his generation," The Crimson reported. Comedian Steve Carell, who played Michael Scott on the popular TV series "The Office," will speak at Princeton University's 2012 Class Day, The Daily Princetonian reported. Carell won a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Television Comedy for his role on "The Office" in 2006, according to nbc.com. "National media have crowned him as the funniest man in America we could not agree more," Lindy Li, Princeton's Class of 2012 president, said in an email to the senior class, The Princetonian reported.