Word: membership
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Neither this nor any other activities of the center, to be devised and developed by the student membership, is intended--any more than the comparable facilities and activities available to other student groups--to separate black students or their interests entirely from the life of the College Quite the contrary, the students urge such a center as among the steps to be taken "to make the black student feel more involved and less isolated in this community...
...official title of Daedalus as "Journal of the Academy of Arts and Sciences" is misleading. It does not record minutes. It could even operate without the Academy, though not nearly as well. The circulation of Daedalus has increased in the eleven years since its founding to 35 times the membership of the Academy. Present circulation stands near 70,000--an increase of 50,000 since 1963. Philanthropic foundations also help. Carnegie Corporation, Danforth Foundation, and the Ford Foundation consistently finance most Daedalus projects. Some Fellows of the Academy, incidentally, have positions with these Foundations...
...majority of Army and Air Force ROTC students, membership in the units is the source of their draft deferments (being graduate students, they are not automatically deferred as are College students); it would seem harsh for the College to urge, if effect, that these draft deferments be abolished...
...faculty committee to limit ROTC credit to two courses. The faculty also votes that, if Congress did not shift the military instruction in the ROTC program to summer camp periods within the next three years, Dartmouth would entirely eliminate degree credit for ROTC. The Dartmouth resolutions limit faculty membership to the senior officer of each ROTC detachment...
...SFAC precluded our proposing the creation of yet another study committee since the SFAC itself had been charged with the issue. Hence our effort in SFAC's two-hour meeting of the 16th--one of our most constructive and harmonious sessions to date, and the last of the present membership--to devise one possible mechanism for student attendance and participation. As supporters of the finished product, we were convinced that the usefulness of producing some proposal as a focus for Faculty debate outweighed the inevitable defects of a proposal constructed in necessary haste...