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(09/01/05 9:00am)
Ever since College president John G. Kemeny and Professor Tom Kurtzas invented the BASIC programming language in 1963, Dartmouth College has been known worldwide as a technological innovator. From developing its own e-mail standard to deploying wireless across campus, Dartmouth has been on the leading edge for over 40 years.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
Dartmouth's administration has focused on issues pertaining to the quality of student life in recent years, and has addressed the Greek system and facility improvement during a time of significant policy formation.
(09/01/05 9:00am)
2001-2002
(07/26/05 9:00am)
Although hundreds of undergraduates descended upon the Connecticut River Saturday for Tubestock, the annual Summer term festivity concluded without major incident.
(07/05/05 9:00am)
While most professors were spending the first week of May in their classrooms, government professor John Carey embarked on a different kind of teaching mission, instructing members of the recently victorious Sudan People's Liberation Movement how to establish an autonomous democratic legislature.
(06/30/05 9:00am)
While most Dartmouth students disagree with the United States Army's "don't ask don't tell" policy, they still overwhelmingly support the Reserve Officer Training Corps at Dartmouth, according to a recently published Student Assembly poll. The poll, which was primarily conducted by David Zubricki '07 and Welton Chang '05, was designed to gauge support among Dartmouth undergraduates for ROTC.
(06/28/05 9:00am)
Air pollution concentrations will remain high over the next few days, possibly reaching unhealthy levels toward the end of the week according to the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services. The polluted air consists of ozone pollution as well as small particles which have been blown up from urban areas by southwesterly winds.
(05/31/05 9:00am)
The Dartmouth College Fund received a total of $13,000 for its senior class gift, with donations from 446 members of the Class of 2005, after a month-long fundraising campaign that finishes Tuesday. While donations have ranged from a single penny to $251, 47 percent of seniors participated, in contrast to the 13 percent participation rate the Class of 2004 reached last year.
(05/20/05 9:00am)
Although he won't officially announce his candidacy to the Vermont public until this fall, Associate Director of the Rockefeller Center Matthew Dunne is already laying the groundwork for a campaign to replace outgoing representative Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., in the U.S. House. Dunne, who plans to run as a Democrat, cited his concern with the current priorities of national politics as his main reason for running.
(05/17/05 9:00am)
Bud Welch, the father of an Oklahoma City bombing victim, advocated the abolishment of the death penalty to roughly 30 Dartmouth community members in the Rockefeller Center Monday evening. While Welch, whose daughter Judy perished on April 19, 1995, initially wanted Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols executed, he has since become a renowned anti-death penalty spokesman.
(05/04/05 9:00am)
College President James Wright defended the derecognition of Zeta Psi fraternity in an interview with The Dartmouth, even as petition candidates Peter Robinson '79 and Todd Zywicki '88 have used the issue in their trustee campaigns.
(04/19/05 9:00am)
For the first time in Student Assembly history, the body's President and Vice President will be elected via instant runoff voting. In the past, candidates were elected via a simple plurality of students, and the systems proponents said the new method would ensure that the winner will have the mandate of a majority of students.
(04/13/05 9:00am)
Dartmouth administrators sharply criticized a decision by the Bush administration's Office of Management and Budget to eliminate the Upward Bound and Talent Search education programs from its 2006 spending plan.
(04/07/05 9:00am)
Even before the Class of 2005 graduates, they will have something in common with all Dartmouth alumni: the College will ask them for money. The Dartmouth College Fund has already created a display in Collis Cafe extolling the virtues of donating to the DCF and will begin soliciting money in May for the senior class gift.
(04/01/05 10:00am)
Terry Schiavo passed away Thursday morning, ending the most heavily litigated -- and most politicized -- right-to-life dispute in U.S. history. The issues surrounding her death, however, will likely continue to be debated for years to come.
(03/03/05 11:00am)
John Broderick, the chief justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court, railed against the infusion of money into state judicial politics from special interest groups Wednesday.
(02/17/05 11:00am)
In an attempt to add diversity to Dartmouth Medical School's graduate population, roughly five students from the City College of New York will join Dartmouth's third-year medical students beginning in 2007.
(02/14/05 11:00am)
The 447-member Democratic National Committee voted to replace outgoing party chief Terry McAuliffe with former Vt. Gov. Howard Dean Saturday. By nightfall, a few conservative students were reportedly already poking fun at Dean with a candlelight vigil on the Green mourning the death of the Democratic Party.
(02/11/05 11:00am)
While participating in dogsled races and polar bear swims, cost is a thought far from many students minds. Yet behind the festivities of Winter Carnival lies a $12,000 budget supplied by Programming Board.
(02/10/05 11:00am)
Air America, a fledgling liberal radio network, has overcome early financial woes to make a comeback, particularly in the hyper-competitive morning talk market. Nearly falling into insolvency only weeks after its launch last March, the network now boasts audiences in 46 cities, a new management team and renewed fiscal backing.