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Foreign Policy Fellows Program Named for John Rosenwald

President Philip J. Hanlon ’77 “ Share May 20, 2021 by Office of Communications Dartmouth honors the board chair emeritus for 70 years of leadership and service. Photo by Robert Gill PreviousNext Dartmouth today announced it will endow, expand, and name its globally recognized foreign relations fellows program in honor of John Rosenwald, Jr. 52, Tuck 53, chair emeritus of the Dartmouth Board of Trustees and counsel to generations of Dartmouth leaders. The postdoctoral fellows program, piloted in 2012 with grant funding from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, brings to Dartmouth leading young scholars who are working on pressing, complex international security questions. Rosenwald s friends and classmates have led a quiet campaign to raise $12 million to endow the program in tribute to his 70 years of leadership and service to Dartmouth. 

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Sarah Ferguson Writes Novel Inspired by Great-Great Aunt

Image zoom Sarah, Duchess of York contemplates her debut novel for adults, Her Heart For A Compass, and its central character Lady Margaret Montagu at home in the grounds of Royal Lodge, Windsor, England | Credit: Debbie Hare Sarah Ferguson, a longtime author, has always been interested in history  royal or otherwise. On Tuesday, the Duchess of York announced she s writing her first novel of historical fiction inspired by the life of her great-great-aunt, Lady Margaret Montagu Douglas Scott. Her Heart For a Compass, written with Marguerite Kaye, will be published jointly by HarperCollins Publishers and Harlequin UK on August 3, 2021. Get push notifications with news, features and more.

When can we return to normal? :: WRAL com

Updated December 19, 2020 6:34 p.m. EST By Tara Parker-Pope, Claire Cain Miller, Margot Sanger-Katz and Quoctrung Bui, New York Times The United States moved one step closer to getting back to normal this past week with the first COVID vaccinations of health care workers around the country. While the majority of Americans won’t get their shots until spring, the vaccine rollout is a hopeful sign of better days ahead. We asked Dr. Anthony Fauci as well as several public health researchers and health and science writers for The New York Times for their predictions about the months ahead. Here’s what they had to say.

Life After Covid: When Can We Start Making Plans?

The United States moved one step closer to getting back to normal this week with the first Covid vaccinations of health care workers around the country. While the majority of Americans won’t get their shots until spring, the vaccine rollout is a hopeful sign of better days ahead. We asked Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, as well as several epidemiologists and health and science writers for The Times, for their predictions about the months ahead. Here’s what they had to say. What advice do you have for families eager to celebrate the holidays with their loved ones? “Do it by Zoom. Don’t let Junior come home and kill Grandma. Think of this like World War II our soldiers didn’t get to fly home to eat turkey. My father was at Normandy. My mother was with the Red Cross in occupied Austria. They missed the holidays. Life went on. There were happier years later.”

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