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Who Gives
As a donor to Saint Anselm College, you support a living learning community dedicated to educating Anselmians who graduate ready to improve our world.
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As a donor to Saint Anselm College, you support a living learning community dedicated to educating Anselmians who graduate ready to improve our world.
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The Saint Anselm Fund represents your chance to make an impact now—and far beyond the four years of college. When you give the gift of a Saint Anselm education, your impact lasts a lifetime.
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Saint Anselm College focuses on educating and preparing Anselmians for fulfilling lives and careers. Your loyal support helps provide a distinctive educational experience for all students.
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In September 2021 the Grappone Humanities Institute launched podcast called “Humanity Examined.”
This monthly student-produced show engages with individuals of all backgrounds from the Saint Anselm College community and the greater New Hampshire area, inviting teachers, students, artists, and people from a variety of fields and backgrounds to tell their own stories about how the humanities have animated their lives.
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On a weekly basis people of all backgrounds and various points of view are contributing to a vibrant conversation about the Humanities and their place in our current culture. Scholars, public officials, journalists, and commentators debate whether the true benefit of the humanities resides in their inherent and intrinsic value or in their proven capacity to help people develop skills and talents that improve their professional prospects and benefit the organizations they serve.
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Over the last two decades, excavations at this Etrusco-Roman settlement have uncovered evidence of habitation of the site from at least the 9th century BCE through the renaissance when the site was destroyed by mudslides. Among its interesting features are sanctuary walls from the Etruscan period to the Roman. The Etruscan wall, dated from ceramics and construction to the 6th century BCE, was surmounted by a series of inverted large pots (dolia) referred to as ziros. In this part of Etruria, these finds frequently indicate a space that is sacred to gods of the dead.