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More than 90% of the faculty hold a doctorate or equivalent degree. [1] Dartmouth faculty were at the forefront of such major academic developments as the Dartmouth Conferences, the Dartmouth Time-Sharing System, Dartmouth BASIC, and Dartmouth ALGOL 30. As of 2005, sponsored project awards to Dartmouth faculty research amounted to $169 million.
After the School of Criticism and Theory left Dartmouth for Cornell University in 1995, Dartmouth faculty member Donald E. Pease started the Futures Institute as an alternative summer program for faculty and graduate students. [3] In 2017 the Futures Institute celebrated the twentieth anniversary of its founding.
F. Jon Kull is the Rodgers Professor of Chemistry and Dean of the Guarini School of Graduate and Advanced Studies at Dartmouth College. [1]In 1988, Kull graduated magna cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in chemistry from Dartmouth College.
He studied chemistry at the University of Kansas (B.S., 1975), and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1980 under Professor E. J. Corey. Following graduate school, he joined the faculty at the University of Kansas where he became assistant/associate professor of medicinal chemistry (1979–1985).
Mirica was appointed to the faculty at Dartmouth College in 2015. [8] She studies self-assembly and multifunctional framework materials. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Amongst the materials developed by Mirica, two-dimensional conductive metal-organic frameworks hold promise for electroanalysis.
The Dartmouth Workshop is said to have run for six weeks in the summer of 1956. [13] Ray Solomonoff's notes written during the Workshop, however, say it ran for roughly eight weeks, from about June 18 to August 17. [14] Solomonoff's Dartmouth notes start on June 22; June 28 mentions Minsky, June 30 mentions Hanover, N.H., July 1 mentions Tom Etter.
In 2005, sponsored project awards to Dartmouth faculty research amounted to $169 million. [64] Dartmouth served as the host member of the University Press of New England, a university press founded in 1970 that included Brandeis University, Tufts University, the University of New Hampshire, and Northeastern University. The University Press of ...
Karen Elizabeth Wetterhahn (October 16, 1948 – June 8, 1997), also known as Karen Wetterhahn Jennette, [1] was an American professor of chemistry at Dartmouth College, New Hampshire, who specialized in toxic metal exposure.