Booze and The Body: Drunk Munchies
By Jilian Gundling "DrunkMunchiesDisorder" has been a phenomenon rampant at Dartmouth since Food Court and Everything But Anchovies first came into existence.
By Jilian Gundling "DrunkMunchiesDisorder" has been a phenomenon rampant at Dartmouth since Food Court and Everything But Anchovies first came into existence.
Caitlin Kelly / The Dartmouth Senior Staff Last month, the New York Times covered 'drunkorexia' as the newest form of eating disorder, calling it a growing phenomenon among college-age young people.
Towards the beginning of March, The New York Times ran an article that introduced a new word to many Americans: Drunkorexia or "self-imposed starvation or bingeing and purging, combined with alcohol abuse" ("Starving Themselves, Cocktail in Hand," Mar.
To the Editor: As I watch this spring's Alumni Association election from the sidelines, I can't help but observe that it is a contest between two political parties: a pro-College slate led by John Mathias '69 dedicated to ending the litigation launched by the current association's executive committee against Dartmouth and a pro-lawsuit petition slate led by Michael Murphy '61.
With Student Assembly elections settled, it is time for the organization's newly elected president and vice president to focus and organize their agenda for the coming year.
Services or activism? Which of these things would you like to get out of your student government?
Akash Maharaj, a transfer student at Yale University, will face charges of larceny and forgery after the university discovered that much of the information on his application to Yale had been fabricated, according to The New York Times.
Marina Agapakis / The Dartmouth Staff Daniel Itzkovitz learned of his parents' trip to Israel through a recording on their answering machine: "We're off to the old country, call back in a couple of weeks," it said.
Today's column will address an issue that has been on my "sports fan conscience" for quite some time. Coverage of professional sports is an expanding business and, at this point, its growth seems exponential, even in the literal sense of that word.
April 3, 9:31 p.m. Lyme Road Following up on a Jan. 31 car accident, Hanover Police charged a 21-year-old male with reckless driving, falsely reporting a stolen vehicle, driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol and improper conduct after an accident.
In an attempt to foster student relationships with alumni and honor Dartmouth graduates for their contributions to the College, the Hill Winds Society, in conjunction with the Office of Alumni Relations, is celebrating the second annual Alumni Appreciation Week from April 7-13.
Editor's note: This is the third installment in a 10-part series profiling various members of the Upper Valley Community. After managing night clubs, guiding fly-fishing trips, instructing skiing and working in restaurants, Kenneth McClintock, an Upper Valley native and one of Dartmouth's outdoor activities icons, returned to Hanover 19 years ago to work in the College's physical education program. McClintock, Dartmouth's assistant director of alpine skiing and sailing, rotates from job to job as the seasons change -- he spends one term teaching emergency rescue classes and devotes other terms to training students to be skiing and sailing instructors.
KYLE BETTS/The Dartmouth / The Dartmouth Staff Global climate change should be approached as an economic problem that can be managed using market incentives, Henry Jacoby, a professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said in a lecture Thursday night in Filene Auditorium.
During the Civil Rights movement, Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote in a letter from his Birmingham County jail cell, "One day the South will recognize its real heroes," Randall Kennedy, author and Harvard Law professor said in a lecture Thursday evening.
Construction at colleges around the country is continuing despite national economic problems, The Chronicle of Higher Education reported Wednesday.
Glenn Britt '71 Tu'72 pledged to donate $150,000 over the next three years to the Tuck School of Business to start up the Britt Technology Impact Series, a program that will allow important figures in a variety of professions to educate students and faculty about cutting-edge technology. "Scientists and engineers are constantly inventing new technologies," Britt, CEO of Time Warner Cable, said in a statement.
Dartmouth's Institute for Information Infrastructure Protection has completed a massive database of its research on cyber-security available to any student, researcher or industry expert across the globe with a valid e-mail address.