Trustees to discuss activities fee raise
The Board of Trustees will discuss a possible increase in the student activities fee when they meet to discuss the budget in February.
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The Board of Trustees will discuss a possible increase in the student activities fee when they meet to discuss the budget in February.
College Provost Lee Bollinger yesterday accepted the University of Michigan Board of Regents' offer to become the next president of the University of Michigan.
With 12 volunteer reporters planted throughout the state, the Dartmouth Election Network will provide up to the minute election coverage for students who tune in to the College radio stations tonight.
The Board of Regents of the University of Michigan may choose the its new President in less than a week.
In his annual address to the faculty yesterday, College President James Freedman reported on the successful completion of the Will to Excel capital campaign and the state of Dartmouth's student admissions.
About 60 students gathered in Shabazz Hall last night to discuss the posters Kappa Kappa Kappa fraternity used to advertise its party last Saturday, which many members of the African American society found offensive.
College Provost Lee Bollinger visited the University of Michigan yesterday to participate in a series of meetings, which University Regents will use in their evaluation of him as a candidate for Michigan's presidency.
The University of Michigan's Board of Regents announced Friday that College Provost Lee Bollinger is one of four finalists in the search for a new Michigan president.
Most freshmen look forward to Homecoming weekend as a chance to become part of a Dartmouth tradition. Many have heard about the weekend from upperclassmen who already have fond memories of Homecomings past.
Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole failed to deliver the dominating performance he needed to win over the electorate, according to the College's own political pundits who gathered in the Rockefeller Center to watch last night's presidential debate live on The Cable News Network.
Lincoln Caplan, senior writer for US News & World Report and one of America's leading observers of legal and public affairs, defended affirmative action last night in a speech titled "A Pragmatist's Case for Affirmative Action."
Business Week ranked the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration 10th in the nation, up three places from last year, in its biennial survey of business schools.
After electing 38 members to its class council, the freshman class is looking forward to setting its agenda for the year, while upperclass councils already have a full schedule.
With breathtaking pictures on the screen behind him, world-renowned climber Todd Skinner spoke to more than 250 students at the Cook Auditorium last night.
Behind the boxes where Dartmouth students pick up their mail everyday, country music provides the backdrop for six men and one woman who work tirelessly to make sure that the mail gets into students' hands, or at least their boxes.