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Dartmouth and Broadcasting
# REDIRECT Dartmouth Broadcasting
Dartmouth Broadcasting began in 1920s with the ambitions of a few Dartmouth College students that decided to give a new technology called radio a try.
The station used the call letters WDBS ( Dartmouth Broadcasting System ).
Dartmouth Broadcasting began officially operating WFRD ( FM Radio at Dartmouth ) 99. 3 FM in 1976.
Dartmouth Broadcasting also covers other major elections as well as the two major parties ' quadrennial conventions.
Dartmouth Broadcasting is an independent student organization.
* Dartmouth Broadcasting Website
Broadcasting, Dartmouth
Dartmouth Broadcasting is a self-supported student organization at Dartmouth College that operates two radio stations, WFRD-FM 99-Rock and WDCR-AM The Voice of Dartmouth.
Dartmouth Broadcasting alumni include famed radio presenters Paul Gambaccini ( BBC ), Anthony Burton ( BBC Radio 3 ) and John Gambling ( WABC New York ).

Dartmouth and receives
Though the group receives no official funding from the school, the Dartmouth Chamber Orchestra maintains its presence on campus through help from various grants from the Music Department and the Committee on Student Organizations.

Dartmouth and no
" Some alumni and students, as well as the conservative student newspaper, The Dartmouth Review, have sought to return the Indian symbol to prominence, but no team has worn the symbol on its uniform in decades.
no: Dartmouth ( Massachusetts )
* Richard N. Current, "' It is ... a small college ... yet, there are those who live it :' Dartmouth College v. Woodward ," American Heritage 14, no.
It is unknown if he participated in the 1773 Boston Tea Party, but he did serve on guard duty before the incident to make sure no tea was unloaded from the Dartmouth, one of the ships involved.
But still, Samuel Pepys notes in his diary on 19 July 1667: " The Dutch fleete are in great squadrons everywhere still about Harwich, and were lately at Portsmouth ; and the last letters say at Plymouth, and now gone to Dartmouth to destroy our Streights ' fleete lately got in thither ; but God knows whether they can do it any hurt, or no, but it was pretty news come the other day so fast, of the Dutch fleets being in so many places, that Sir W. Batten at table cried, By God, says he, I think the Devil shits Dutchmen.
Although considered a built-up urban area, Archway has a number of parks and green spaces, no fewer than nine within a mile of the tube station: Archway Park, Hillrise Park, Dartmouth Park, Elthorne Park, Sunnyside Gardens, Crouch Hill Park, Waterlow Park, Whittington Park, Foxham Gardens, and Tufnell Park Playing Fields.
A chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa honor society is active, but there are no professional fraternities with active chapters at Dartmouth College.
Ten Dartmouth Review staffers who dismantled the shanties were disciplined by the College, even though there was no physical or verbal form of " attack ," and the shanties were illegal to begin with.
In 1939, the College's political influence was no longer deemed problematic, and The Dartmouth, Inc. was transferred from Maine to New Hampshire.
* Dartmouth Inclined Plane ( no longer present )
Nova Scotia no longer maintains cities as first-tier municipalities, however it has designated the former cities of Halifax and Dartmouth, the two largest by population, as " Metropolitan Areas " within their respective regional municipality.

Dartmouth and direct
The A3122 connects Dartmouth to a junction with the A381, and hence to both Totnes and a more direct route to Kingsbridge.
Fous consulted with editors of The Dartmouth Review as well as Detroit News writer Alan Miller to help direct the formation of the paper.

Dartmouth and funding
The student aspect of the Dartmouth Ski Patrol is governed by the Dartmouth Outing Club, which provides some funding and facilities for the patrol.
Like Dartmouth College as a whole, the medical school had continual funding shortages.

Dartmouth and from
In addition, the 1952 study collected comparable data from 4,585 students at ten other colleges and universities scattered across the country: Dartmouth, Harvard, Yale, Wesleyan, North Carolina, Fisk, Texas, University of California at Los Angeles, Wayne, and Michigan.
The Dartmouth Skiway, at Holt's Ledge, ten miles north of the campus, has one of the best terrains in the East, ranging from novice to expert.
He transformed Dartmouth from a small New Hampshire institution into a national college.
John had claimed her from the stag line, a young man a year out of Dartmouth with skiing crinkles still around his eyes.
Halifax skyline from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
After a long period of financial and political struggles, Dartmouth emerged in the early 20th century from relative obscurity.
Dartmouth alumni, from Daniel Webster to the many donors in the 19th and 20th centuries, have been famously involved in their college.
Dartmouth was founded by Eleazar Wheelock, a Puritan minister from Columbia, Connecticut, who had previously sought to establish a school to train Native Americans as missionaries.
The nominees for alumni trustee are determined by a poll of the members of the Association of Alumni of Dartmouth College, selecting from among names put forward by the Alumni Council or by alumni petition.
" Since then, Dartmouth has graduated over 700 Native American students from over 200 different tribes, more than the other seven Ivy League universities combined.
Nelson A. Rockefeller, 41st Vice President of the United States and 49th Governor of New York, graduated cum laude from Dartmouth with a degree in economics in 1930.
Norman Maclean, a former professor at the University of Chicago and author of A River Runs Through It and Other Stories, graduated from Dartmouth in 1924.
In the 1969 movie Goodbye, Columbus, Richard Benjamin finds out all the men at a party are from Dartmouth.
Henry Hudson put in to Dartmouth on his return from America, and was arrested for sailing under a foreign flag.
Charles II held court in the Butterwalk whilst sheltering from storms in 1671 in a room which now forms part of Dartmouth Museum.
The nearest Met Office weather station is Slapton, about 5 miles South south west of Dartmouth and a similar distance from the coast.
Opposition from local seamen and merchants saw the route diverted to Kingswear on the opposite side of the river, but this occurred after the station had been built at Dartmouth.
Kingswear seen from Dartmouth
Dartmouth Community College and Dartmouth Primary School are part of the Dartmouth Learning Campus ; as from September 2007, Dartmouth Community College is part of a federation with Dartmouth Primary School and Nursery, meaning that the two schools share one governing body for pupils aged 1 to 19.
Dartmouth College was established in 1769 beside the Common at a village called the Plain — an extensive and level tract of land a mile ( 1. 6 kilometers ) from the Connecticut River, and about 150 feet ( 46 meters ) above it.
Based on Haliburton's writings, there have been claims that modern hockey originated in Windsor, Nova Scotia, by King's College students and was named after an individual, as in “ Colonel Hockey's game .” Others claim that the origins of hockey come from games played in the area of Dartmouth and Halifax in Nova Scotia.

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