Thayer School receives fellowship grant
The Thayer School of Engineering will receive $530,000 from the Clare Luce Booth Program to pay for a new female faculty position and to fund the last year of study for eight female engineering majors.
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Dartmouth's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query.
120 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
The Thayer School of Engineering will receive $530,000 from the Clare Luce Booth Program to pay for a new female faculty position and to fund the last year of study for eight female engineering majors.
Class of 1995 valedictorian Kristin Cobb developed a near-perfect recipe for success since she first arrived on campus -- a successful combination of academics and running.
Hanover Police are currently investigating one theft that occurred this weekend and have made an arrest in another case.
Dean of the College Lee Pelton announced yesterday that College Health Services Director Dr. Jack Turco will co-chair a task force aimed at examining the problems caused by alcohol at the College.
Today marks the 25th anniversary of the inauguration of former College President John Kemeny, a Dartmouth legend whose actions forever changed the College.
Photographers from Playboy Magazine will come to Dartmouth this May to interview women who would like to pose for the "Women of the Ivy League" pictorial in its October back to school issue.
The Dartmouth Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Organization will hold an open forum this afternoon to address issues surrounding an anti-homosexual flier it received in its Hinman Box two weeks ago.
Even for a school ranked eighth in the nation by U.S. News and World Report magazine, this year's $25,720 price tag seems a little hefty.
The heroic dog, Buck, in Jack London's "The Call of the Wild" traveled far from home to become a rough and tumble sled dog somewhere north of the Arctic Circle.
How does an organization create a substance-free, intimate environment where all Dartmouth students can interact in a different way than campus organizations with similar goals, like Asgard or the Programming Board?
The College's Board of Trustees raised tuition 6.45 percent, up $1,260 to $20,805, at its winter meeting this weekend.
The Committee on Organization and Policy recently sent out questionnaires to students and faculty to assess the effectiveness of the College's Academic Honor Principle.
All across the country, America's newest college students are tuning out.
The College's Health Services concluded last week that the Norwalk Virus probably caused the outbreak of vomiting, nausea and diarrhea that afflicted more than 100 students at the end of Fall term.
The Student Assembly's executive committee passed a motion 9-1 yesterday calling for the administration to push back the deadline for counter-proposals to the Office of Residential Life's proposed Coed Fraternity Sorority housing policy.
For a man tackling such a monumental task as reforming American education, Dr. Theodore Sizer speaks with impressive calm.
Norman Frisch recently resigned as programming director of the Hopkins Center for the Performing Arts after only a year in the position.
For the last 33 years, Webster Hall has been a building looking for a home.
Student Assembly President Rukmini Sichitiu '95 yesterday unveiled an ambitious agenda for the Student Assembly, starting with an attempt to save Webster Hall.
The New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union, which is organizing an effort to overturn the Hanover Police Department's "internal possession" policy, hired a lawyer near the end of Fall term to represent minors with grievances concerning the policy.