Who is Prof. Nichols?
Government Professor Tom Nichols, who won $45,690 last winter on the Jeopardy, will be given one more chance on the game show because of a mistake made during the game in which he lost.
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Government Professor Tom Nichols, who won $45,690 last winter on the Jeopardy, will be given one more chance on the game show because of a mistake made during the game in which he lost.
The Women's Resource Center exudes a certain casual, unpretentious atmosphere where women feel free to walk around barefoot and to bring their lives to the forefront of discussion. And the Center's new director is no exception to the rule.
The averted housing crisis of fall is resulting in the review of College policies that have allowed larger enrollments during the Fall term than other terms.
For the second year in a row, Dartmouth ranked eighth in U.S. News and World Report's annual rating of national colleges and universities.
Wednesday's convocation exercises, marking the official opening of the College's 225th academic year, will include a keynote address by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala as well as speeches by College President James Freedman and Student Assembly President Danielle Moore.
The College's 224th Commencement ceremony is part of a long tradition of graduation festivities that includes famous speakers, drunkards, jugglers and crazy alumni antics.
The College will award a playwright, a historian, an artist, a scientist and three distinguished alumni with honorary degrees at today's 224th Commencement ceremonies.
English Professor William Cook gave his first commencement speech Saturday to a graduating class of 579 students at Rivier College in Nashua, N.H., where he received an honorary degree.
For the athletically inclined, the Programming Board will introduce the Green Key Olympics this year to this spring weekend's list of events.
Labor Secretary Robert Reich '68 and six others will receive honorary degrees at the 224th Commencement exercises in June, the College announced yesterday.
A solar eclipse will create a bright golden ring in the sky this afternoon, but viewing the eclipse improperly may cause blindness.
Although Nelson Mandela declared victory in South Africa's first all-race presidential election two nights ago, Government Professor Nelson Kasfir said the outcome was obvious since March, when he visited the country.
Five students from the Thayer School of Engineering just finished converting a 1982 Chevy S-10 pickup truck they rescued from a junkyard into a battery-powered "ElecTruck," for the Hanover Police Department to use as a parking enforcement vehicle.
Webster Hall, which usually hosts speeches and concerts, was filled with some distinctly different vibes Friday night. Psychic Craig Karges drew a large crowd to his unusual show.
Just before Dave Rinehart '95 was to place his winning bid on a $900 prize package of a doormat and pair of lamps on the Price is Right last Thursday, President Bill Clinton broke into the broadcast with a special news report.
The second annual Committee on Standards mock hearing last night was the first event in the College's recognition of Sexual Assault Awareness Week.
Two journalists spoke Friday about the media's attempt to chronicle social change through articles and cover photographs.
A compulsive exerciser might be someone who runs 60 miles and eats 5,000 calories per day, comprised of apple slices and rice cakes, said Alayne Yates, a former professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the University of Arizona.
The Committee on Instruction did not receive any responses by its deadline from those asked to comment on a proposal to change the format of student transcripts.
Simply adding more women to the field of international politics will not make a difference in their visibility or in deconstructing stereotypes, said Margot Light, a visiting professor from the London School of Economics.