Hug your loved ones a little tighter. We have to take action now, there is no time to wait when it costs a life. The Hanover Police Department did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's request for comment. HANOVER At the end of the second week of fall term classes, roughly 500 members of the Dartmouth College community gathered the evening of Sept. 23 in front of Baker-Berry Library to listen to the colleges president, chaplain and student leaders offer words of solace and encouragement following the announcement of two student deaths earlier that week. On Tuesday, the college announced it would suspend classes on Oct. 21 and pause other activities through about 3 p.m. that day to allow students, faculty and staff to participate in a Day of Caring, a day-long series of programs, speakers and activities focused on mental health and well-being. Additionally, Lamees Kareem, a junior from Saudi Arabia, died in April of a medical condition not related to COVID-19. Dartmouth student's death The school's newspaper reported Dartmouth student She said her notes to the families focused on letting them know that the Dartmouth community was there for them. { tag_id.innerHTML = ' Buy this Image';
(Valley News - Jennifer Hauck) Copyright Valley News. On a warm spring night, Dartmouth College students gather on the Green on Friday, May 21, 2021, in Hanover N.H. ", "He was a four-year starter and a high character individual," Callahan told the Valley News. Vogele spoke of simple acts of kindness and compassion she had observed in recent days, including students who had distributed cookies they had baked; a staff member who waited with a deeply distressed student until a counselor arrived; and notes of kindness cafe workers had written on customers drinks. (left to right) Student veteran Javier Villanueva '25, donor Janice Reynolds '82, and student veteran James Miceli '24 at the Veterans Resource Center grand opening. The resignation letter that Middlebury Union High School principal Justin Campbell sent to the school community was brief and boilerplate.After Twas 63 years ago when the Enfield board of selectmen Charlie Tupper, Isaac Sanborn and Henry Laramie sat down with representatives of the Vermont lawmakers have spent months considering legislation to strengthen state anti-harassment protections for workers.