Palaeopitus selects next year's members
Palaeopitus, a group of senior leaders who advise College President James Freedman and Dean of the College Lee Pelton, initiated its members from the Class of 1997 last night.
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Palaeopitus, a group of senior leaders who advise College President James Freedman and Dean of the College Lee Pelton, initiated its members from the Class of 1997 last night.
Network services should be restored to the East Wheelock and RipWoodSmith clusters, and Alpha Delta and Chi Heorot fraternities by this afternoon.
Students kept Safety and Security officers busy this weekend as officers tended to violations of the College's alcohol policy, vandalism of College property and alcohol-related injuries.
What role does the College's junior honor society play in organizing the events of Green Key weekend? Absolutely none.
While College faculty and students expressed surprise at Senator Bob Dole's (R-Kans.) decision to resign from the Senate, they said it may resuscitate his bid for the presidency.
College faculty and students said they learned a great deal about themselves, other cultures and American culture while completing Fulbright Scholarships at yesterday's panel discussion commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Academic Exchange Program.
Despite the fact that finals are looming, students are planning to escape from Baker for this weekend's Green Key events.
At yesterday's meeting of the faculty of arts and sciences, faculty heard Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid Karl Furstenberg explain the statistics for the Class of 2000, received news about a donation that will provide new computers for faculty and recognized the contribution of eight faculty members who are due to retire.
Executive Washington editor for The Wall Street Journal Al Hunt's involvement in journalism began "almost accidentally" when he reluctantly accepted a job as a copy boy for the Chicago Bulletin after being suspended from Wake Forest University, in North Carolina.
By Fall term, Baker Library, Dartmouth Hall and several other College landmarks may be adorned with "elegant" signs.
The College's Board of Trustees has selected William Neukom '64, senior vice president for law and corporate affairs at Microsoft Corporation, to become the board's newest member.
Persuading the audience to shout in Spanish and clap in unison like people who attend her farm workers' meetings, Dolores Huerta, co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America, said the only way to affect social change is to "make it happen yourself."
The presidential candidates in this year's Student Assembly elections all ran on similar platforms, vowing to continue building the organization's legitimacy, address social issues on campus as well as promising student services.
The Hanover Police Department is still investigating two burglaries that occurred over spring break in the Lodge residence hall, but is not yet prepared to make any arrests, Hanover Police Detective Sergeant Frank Moran said.
For most of Spring term, the Baker Tower bells have tolled for no one.
About 50 people gathered in Collis Common Ground last night to hear former all-state football player Jackson Katz discuss the importance of dispelling social constructs that encourage men to perpetrate violence against women.
BLD, a new College publication that aims to provide a non-ideological forum for student discussion, was distributed for the first time last Thursday.
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author David Halberstam will address the Class of 1996 at the College's 226th Commencement exercises on June 9. Halberstam will also receive an honorary doctor of letters degree.
Free speech activist Claudia Johnson discussed the five- year-long battle she waged to restore Chaucer's "The Miller's Tale" and Aristophanes' "Lysistrata" to a rural Florida high school in a speech she gave yesterday afternoon in Carpenter Hall.
Claudia Johnson's battle for free speech began on a hot summer day in 1986 `she was sitting by her stepfathers pool, drink in hand. It was here, while engaged in lazy conversation, when she learned of the local preacher's intention to ban Chaucer's "The Miller's Tale" and Aristophanes's "Lysistrata" from the high school curriculum.