BOOKED SOLID: Matthew Shepard's Mom Speaks Out
In the first few pages of "The Meaning of Matthew," Judy Shepard recounts a story that has been chronicled in countless other works over the course of the last 11 years: the grisly and disturbing tale of how her son, Matthew Shepard, was kidnapped, brutally beaten and left to die in a remote Laramie, Wyo.
New ‘Top Model' lacks realism
After enough seasons on the air, any television series reality or scripted runs the risk of becoming repetitive, and Tyra Banks appears to know that her reality TV brainchild, The CW's "America's Next Top Model," is not immune.
Clinic-CMC affiliation draws fire
ZACH INGBRETSEN / The Dartmouth Staff Correction appended The proposed affiliation between the Dartmouth-Hitchcock Clinic the multi-specialty group physician practice affiliated with Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and Catholic Medical Center in Manchester has drawn criticism from organizations on both sides of the abortion debate since the two medical groups announced their intention to form a partnership in February.
Spears says College will not adopt AMP
The College's proposed alcohol management policy a repeatedly delayed set of guidelines on alcohol use at campus social events almost a year in the making will not become official College policy, acting Dean of the College Sylvia Spears announced unexpectedly in a meeting with Greek leaders on Wednesday. Spears' announcement comes after several campus Greek leaders told The Dartmouth this summer that they had expected AMP would be implemented during Fall term until the abrupt August resignation of former Dean of the College Tom Crady. At the Wednesday meeting, Spears also announced minor changes to the current social event management policy which AMP was to replace and proposed the creation of a new student advisory board on alcohol policy, which will work to recommend changes to SEMP. "I think that we need more evidence and information, so that [for] any new procedure or policy that we put in place we could be pretty confident it's going to result in the kind of outcomes that we hope for student organizations," Spears said in an interview with The Dartmouth following the announcement. The implementation of AMP had been delayed several times since the policy was originally finalized in Spring 2008.
College critic makes voice heard
ZACH INGBRETSEN / The Dartmouth Staff Correction appended A little over a month into his tenure writing for the Dartmouth-centric web site Dartblog, Joseph Asch '79, an outspoken and often controversial fixture of Dartmouth alumni political discourse, has already disputed the College's calculation of the student-to-faculty ratio, questioned recent appointments to the College administration and challenged plans to revise the Board of Trustees election process. Asch, who some have speculated will enter the upcoming Board of Trustees race as a petition candidate, is frequently criticized for his fervent arguments on College issues.
Field hockey falls at hands of Princeton, Boston University
Sarah Irving / The Dartmouth Staff The Big Green field hockey team opened its Ivy League season with a 6-1 loss at home to Princeton Saturday before falling 1-0 to Boston University on Sunday in Hanover. Rebecca Sobel '11 scored her sixth goal of the season to avoid a shutout by the Tigers (5-1, 1-0 Ivy). Dartmouth (1-4, 0-1 Ivy) walked onto the field with a particular game plan to deal with the Princeton powerhouse, but the team still started off slowly, Sobel said. "It took us a while to get into our rhythm," she said. Princeton, meanwhile, showed ferocity right from the opening whistle.
A First-Year Nightmare
I've been having a recurring nightmare of late, which I assume is not uncommon among first-year students at prestigious colleges like Dartmouth.
College's newest sorority prepares for first fall rush
Kappa Delta sorority, which accepted Dartmouth's invitation to become the College's eighth Panhellenic sorority in May, will participate in its first formal rush process this fall.
Study finds genetic tests unreliable
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. The pair found in a second study, however, that the technique may be useful in gathering ancestral information. The researchers published their findings in the Sept.
Doctors discuss nicotine addiction at conference
Physicians from across the nation gathered to discuss smoking-related issues in the first-annual C.
Interest in two-year colleges surges
Enrollment in New Hampshire's seven community colleges is up 12 percent this fall, an apparent reaction to the current economic climate.
Daily Debriefing
Cornell University's InterFraternity Council indefinitely banned drinking games and all non-catered parties with open invitations last week in response to the high number of students with the H1N1 virus, according to The Cornell Daily Sun.
Kim lauds the value of a liberal arts education
TILMAN DETTE / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Global health leader Jim Yong Kim was officially inaugurated as Dartmouth's 17th president on Tuesday before an audience of more than 5,000 people.
Men's rugby sweeps season openers, women fall to UMass
Dratch '88 headlines arts event
Tilman Dette / The Dartmouth Senior Staff In many ways, Monday night's "Dartmouth and the Performing Arts" event in Moore Theater surprised no one.
In Praise of Orientation
William Shakespeare once wrote, "Friends, Greeks, freshmen, lend me your ears; I come to praise Orientation, not to bury it." Or at least he said something along those lines.






