Seventh senior society approved
A small group of students recently received provisional approval from the administration to form a seventh senior society, the first new society since Phoenix gained recognition in 1982.
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A small group of students recently received provisional approval from the administration to form a seventh senior society, the first new society since Phoenix gained recognition in 1982.
For the first time since the College became coeducational in 1972, the freshman class has more matriculating women than men -- 526 women and 522 men.
Ivy and leaves grow along the rusty-red brick facade of Parkhurst administration building. Two monolithic pillars and massive wooden doors, more than three times the size of even the tallest Dartmouth student, will stare you down as you take your first steps into Parkhurst on the way to the Freshman Office.
While sophomores still have to worry about housing for the next fall term, the Secret Service and the press had better not complain about their housing assignments for the upcoming Commencement weekend. They could be living on campus--and they won't be in the River cluster or the Choates.
The College will award honorary degrees to eight individuals at the 225th Commencement ceremony, including President Bill Clinton, who will receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree.
Palaeopitus, an organization of senior campus leaders who advise the College President and Dean of the College, selected new members and announced revisions to its constitution Sunday night.
The next dean of the Thayer School of Engineering Elsa Garmire yesterday spoke to a group of Women in Science Program interns about careful curiosity in science, the need for relevance in engineering and the importance of friends in society.
As nationwide interest in biotechnology fields and medical school grows, the interest in science-related fields at the College has also increased dramatically in recent years.
Sixteen students are currently lurking around campus with guns concealed in their pockets, ready to hunt down their next victims.
Katie Koestner, a recent graduate of the College of William and Mary, recounted her personal experience as a rape victim in a speech last night and urged the audience to "yell and scream" to make America more aware of the problem of rape.
Dr. Frank Young spoke Friday to students about resolving the conflict between faith, science and society and the importance of self-evaluation of faith, values and truth.
Saetec, Inc., a student-run firm, recently entered the market for College students' long-distance and international telephone business and is challenging the monopoly over student telephone service at the College.
Instead of watching Court TV or reading USA Today every morning, students interested in the O.J. Simpson trial need only check their electronic mail.
One afternoon at the start of this term, Acting College President James Wright and Peter Gilbert, senior assistant to the president, decided to join a group of students sitting at a table in Food Court in Thayer Dining Hall.
Driven by ambition and discipline from years of gymnastics training, Robert Seung-Bok Lee is out to prove that the word "disabled" does not apply to fulfilling one's dreams.
"It is not sufficient to make your point once and then blame the rest of the world for not getting it ... The point has to be made patiently and repeatedly, day after day after day," Dana Meadows wrote in 1972.
The College is continuing ongoing inspections into lead levels in the faculty apartments.
The Office of Residential Life will review the Graduate Students-in-Residence program this spring.
With all of the resources at a professor's fingertips in a major metropolis, it is difficult to image a professor moving from a major university in the heart of Chicago or New York and coming to rural New Hampshire.