How many ways can the U. say 'recession'?
In October of 1975, amid cuts to the faculty and financial aid, then-President Donald Hornig sat down with the Herald for an hour, his typical method for releasing information to the community.
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In October of 1975, amid cuts to the faculty and financial aid, then-President Donald Hornig sat down with the Herald for an hour, his typical method for releasing information to the community.
The room was silent except for the squeak of markers against whiteboards. Messy letters filled the boxes, building corners with words intertwined. As white space disappeared, the crowd held its breath ...
The Office of Campus Life and Student Services has expanded the roles of several top administrators to cover the responsibilities once filled by currently vacant positions, including that of the associate ...
When Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts '78 was in college, had you asked her if she would ever run for public office, she said she "would have looked at you like you had two heads."
S-E-Q-U-I-N-S
The University has seen an increase in minority and women faculty since the creation of the Office of Institutional Diversity in 2003, according to statistics released by the Office of the Dean of the ...
Shelved in the walk-in basement vault of the John Hay Library is a second-edition copy of "Mein Kampf." A yellowing bookplate on its inside cover features a menacing eagle with wings outstretched and ...
Richard Holbrooke '62, professor-at-large at the Watson Institute for International Studies and a former U.N. ambassador, was appointed special envoy to Afghanistan and Pakistan in a State Department ...
Last spring, Henry Shepherd '08 began exchanging e-mails with students at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, after being put in contact with them by Terrence Hopmann, professor emeritus ...
When Marion Orr was in middle school, ABC News hired Max Robinson as the first African-American television news anchor. Every day, Orr left the playground at 6 p.m. so he could hear Robinson on the news. ...
Applications for off-campus housing went live on the Office of Residential Life's Web site at 8:30 a.m., but students don't have to hurry to get online this year.
The real ballots will not be counted until tomorrow, but according to The Herald poll conducted last week, 86.1 percent of Brown students support Sen. Barack Obama, while 6.3 percent support Sen. John ...
Rising seniors will choose groups without knowing their individual numbers ahead of time in this year's lottery, just like all other students. A Residential Council vote approved the measure last week, ...
President Ruth Simmons appeared on "The Today Show" Friday for "Brunch with Power Women." Hosted by Meredith Vieira, four women, including Simmons, discussed gender and equality in the workplace.
A few weeks into the semester, Gabriela Garcia '12 received an e-mail telling her she had chosen an "unusually challenging set of courses for (her) first semester," and it pointed out campus resources. ...
The future of cable on campus is filled with static.
Sofia Unanue '11 has, by now, observed her roommate's daily rituals enough times to know them by heart.
Brown/RISD Hillel's new rabbi, Mordechai Rackover, got to College Hill late last week to start his new job.
Now that the University has admitted its first class under an enhanced financial aid policy, it is clear the changes are affecting a significant number of students.
During Orientation, William Trinh '12 found his hallway, but there were only five other first-years there. For the time being, Trinh is living in King House and assigned to a Perkins unit, thanks to a ...