Montgomery fellows announced
The College's Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Fellowship program has selected internationally renowned composer Steve Reich and video art pioneer Beryl Korot as this term's first Montgomery Fellows.
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The College's Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Fellowship program has selected internationally renowned composer Steve Reich and video art pioneer Beryl Korot as this term's first Montgomery Fellows.
In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Dartmouth has planned a series of events, starting Monday and continuing throughout the month.
Citing Al Gore's track record in Washington and his platform of healthcare, education and the economy, Indiana Senator Evan Bayh announced yesterday at Dartmouth that he is supporting the Vice President in the coming elections.
In an effort to preserve Winter Rush given the anticipation surrounding the release of the steering committee's recommendations to the Board of Trustees on the Student Life Initiative, the Intra-Fraternity Council has decided to hold rush on Sunday, instead of Monday, January 10, as previously announced, IFC President Hondo Sen '00 said yesterday.
Even as the number of applicants for early decision continues its downward trend, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg is confident that the total applicant pool will be as large as last year's.
Students who have been convicted of possession or sale of illegal drugs will be restricted from receiving federal loans or scholarships to finance their college education, according to a new U.S. Department of Education policy.
The Supreme Court considered the constitutionality of student activity fees last week as it heard arguments in the Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin v. Southworth case.
Newly elected Chief of the Cherokee Nation Chad Smith spoke at Dartmouth on Friday afternoon, focusing on reasons not to support casino gaming and addressing the challenges the tribe will face in the next 100 years.
Dean of Admissions Karl Furstenberg criticized the decision of certain universities, such as Brown, Harvard and Georgetown Universities, to allow students to apply to multiple schools under the Early Action program, describing the new policy as " irresponsible."
About 1,100 high school seniors applied early decision to the College this year for a place in the Class of 2004 -- a number comparable to that of last year, according to Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg.
In a last ditch effort to fund the state's education budget, the New Hampshire legislature passed a new property tax on Wednesday that will result in a significantly higher tax rate for both the Town of Hanover and the College.
Plans are currently under way to find a physical space for the Humanities Center, according to Jonathan Crewe, Professor of English and Director of the Humanities Center.
The U.S. Supreme Court will begin hearing arguments this week on the constitutionality of student activity fees that could drastically alter the way colleges and universities collect such funds from students.
Homecoming seems like a blur for most people who look back on their Dartmouth experiences after being away from Hanover for a few decades.
Winners of the lottery for tickets to the upcoming Presidential Candidate Town Meeting will be notified throughout this week, according to Linda Fowler, director of the Rockefeller Center.
A bicycle route from Hanover to the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center may soon be under construction if the town's legislature accepts a committee's proposal early next week.
Princeton University Sociology Professor Dr. Robert Wuthnow spoke on the evolution of religion in the 20th century and likened spirituality to hamburgers during yesterday's 23rd annual Orr Lecture held in 2 Rockefeller Center.
The Inter-Fraternity Council plans to discuss the proposition of accommodating the 40 or more men who were not offered any bids into fraternity houses that may want more members, according to IFC President Hondo Sen '00.
Can computers think like humans? An upcoming contest to be hosted at Dartmouth in January will test that question, posed 50 years ago by British mathematician and computer scientist Alan Turing.
While many other universities offer students competitive corporate rates for long distance telephone calls, DarTalk, the College's telephone service, charges several cents higher than average corporate rates, much to the continuing complaints of many students.