Former College forester dies at 86
The Lone Pine flag flew at half staff yesterday to honor Robert Scott Monahan '29, College forester from 1947 to 1971, who passed away on Sunday. He was 86 years old.
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The Lone Pine flag flew at half staff yesterday to honor Robert Scott Monahan '29, College forester from 1947 to 1971, who passed away on Sunday. He was 86 years old.
David McCullough, award-winning author of "Truman" and a Montgomery Fellow at the College discussed his works and the inspirations behind them with almost 100 people in Cook Auditorium last night.
The Gap, a national chain of clothing retailers, hopes to open its Hanover store by the first of June, College Real Estate Director Paul Olsen said.
Following recommendations made by the Committee on Diversity and Community at Dartmouth, the College is looking into the way it allocates funds to cultural affinity groups.
The College is opposing a proposed New Hampshire law that would prevent colleges and universities from enforcing speech codes on students and professors.
Vice President of Development and Alumni Affairs Stanley Colla said Kent Klineman 54 recently gave the College $2.55 million in the form of a life-income trust.
The College's Committee On Instruction voted last Thursday to recommend discontinuing a program that allows undergraduates to spend their senior year at the Amos Tuck School of Business Administration or the Dartmouth Medical School.
At its recent winter meeting, the Alumni Council nominated Peter Fahey '68, Michael Keeshan '73 and Gary Love '76 to replace departing Robert Danziger '56 on the College's Board of Trustees
In January 1986, at the height of debate over Dartmouth investments in South Africa, 12 students armed with sledgehammers attacked four student-built shanties on the Green.
Denise Scott-Brown, the designer of the College's "concept plan" for north campus expansion, will meet with the alumni council in two weeks to discuss how future developments will remain faithful to Dartmouth's architectural history.
A committee of department chairs voted yesterday to terminate the College's exchange program to Budapest University of Arts and Social Sciences because no academic department will take responsibility for running the program.
At the dedication of the Hood Museum in 1985, former College President David McLaughlin lauded the family that made the building a reality.
The chair of the Will to Excel capital campaign yesterday said an $8 million donation will allow the implementation of a new curriculum that was delayed last spring because of a lack of funds.
First Amendment rights are not absolutely guaranteed on college campuses, according to administrators, professors and journalists who spoke as part of a live videoconference shown in Silsby Hall yesterday.
College President James Freedman will speak on first amendment rights on college campuses, a frequently debated issue at Dartmouth, in a taped speech Thursday afternoon.
A growing number of students are taking the free AIDS test offered by the College, a trend that health administrators say reflects increasing acceptance of the test as part of a regular health maintenance routine.
President Bill Clinton's proposal for national health care reform will push medical institutions at Dartmouth toward adopting managed health care services in providing medical care and health care education to Dartmouth students and Upper Valley residents.
Capitation. Gatekeepers. Health Alliances. The terminology of President Clinton's health care plan seems hostile and uninviting, but the plans' goals are simple -- universal access to primary health care for everyone -- even college students.
Five graduate students selected by the Office of Residential Life last spring to live in undergraduate dormitories moved into their apartments at the beginning of this term.
In a message to the entire Class of 1997, the embattled education department announced it will continue to offer a minor program and a teacher certification program to all students currently enrolled in the College.