College approves Morocco FSP
Last month, the College approved and guaranteed funding for a Foreign Study Program in Fez, Morocco for a one-year trial period in the Fall term.
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Last month, the College approved and guaranteed funding for a Foreign Study Program in Fez, Morocco for a one-year trial period in the Fall term.
The recent controversy surrounding the resignation of Student Assembly President Danielle Moore '95 has sparked debate about whether Dartmouth students need to rethink how it treats their women leaders.
As College President James Freedman heads to Cambridge, Mass. for his six-month sabbatical beginning Jan. 1, a game of administrative musical chairs will place Dean of Faculty James Wright in the President's Office and Chemistry Professor Karen Wetterhahn in the Dean of Faculty Office.
The proposed foreign study program in Fez, Morocco cleared a major hurdle last week but will face two more before it can become a reality.
Mathematics lecturer John Finn '69 and his son pleaded not guilty on charges of cultivating marijuana at an arraignment yesterday in Orange County District Court, Deputy Clerk Dean Martin said.
With a flurry of activities sponsored by various campus organizations, Students Fighting Hunger kicked off the annual Hunger Awareness Week to combat poverty and homelessness in the Upper Valley.
He walked like a warrior, greeting people who had come to meet him, flashing his handsome smile, appearing strong and happy despite the historic losses his party suffered in last week's midterm elections.
Scholars, writers and directors of organizations dealing with Spanish culture will gather at the College for an international symposium to evaluate the current cultural renaissance in Spain.
Environmental activist and acoustic artist Dana Lyons yesterday urged an alliance between members of the environmental movement and indigenous peoples in order to combat the current destruction of the earth's resources.
Justin Heather '96 won't just be voting in the Nov. 8 N.H. House of Representatives' elections. His name will be on the ballot as well.
Within the next few days, the Asian Studies program will find out if the Committee on Off-Campus Activities has approved its Foreign Study Program to Fez, Morocco.
How far will an Ivy League newspaper go to bring the most pressing news to the fingertips of the campus community? Pretty far, as some are alleging, if you're Ruth Halikman, the editor in chief of the Columbia Daily Spectator.
Despite several arrests for alleged under-age alcohol consumption and rushing the field during the Homecoming football game, this year's Dartmouth Night weekend was considerably tamer than last year's.
The United Way of Dartmouth College will kick off its 1994 campaign next Tuesday to raise $146,000 for the benefit of local health and social service agencies.
Vermont Governor Howard Dean declared the month of October "Rocktober" for the second consecutive year in recognition of College radio station WFRD 99 Rock's commitment to better broadcasting.
U.S. Representative Dick Swett (D-N.H.) spoke about his crusade to reform government at the first meeting of the Young Democrats at Dartmouth last night.
The Native American Center moved into its larger, newly renovated facility this term, providing affinity housing and cultural opportunities for the College's Native American community.
The Will to Excel Campaign has raised $359.9 million of its $425 million goal through August, representing 84.7 percent of the five-year total in only 68.5 percent of the time.
Despite the sweeping changes of the new curriculum and the distributive requirements beginning with the Class of 1998, the new course listings in the September 1994 Organizations, Regulations and Courses book will have little or no impact on the listings for upperclassmen.
As Fall term draws near, the College is ironing out the kinks created by the its first major curriculum change in 40 years.