'Baby' play precedes Albee's visit
"Lights up," said Olivia Gilliatt '08, sitting in a chair facing the stage with a notebook in hand.
"Lights up," said Olivia Gilliatt '08, sitting in a chair facing the stage with a notebook in hand.
Hoop highs: the NBA regular season
Engineers at the Thayer School collaborated with the United States Army's Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory in Hanover to develop a solar-powered robot designed for operation in Antarctica and Greenland.
Editor's note: This article is the first of a four-part series examining senior theses and culminating experiences in the arts. As the middle of the term approaches, seniors majoring in every department at Dartmouth are busy wrapping up their projects and theses. Drawing near the end of their college careers, seniors majoring in the Film and Television Department don't have much time for nostalgia before they enter the cutthroat entertainment industry beyond college.
As the candidates for student body president and vice president enter their sixth day of campaigning, two students have attempted to make press in an unorthodox way as write-in presidential candidates.
Students taking classes in the art history, religion and math departments who have come to rely on the Departmental Editing Program will not lose this writing resource at the end of the academic year as originally expected. Joseph Asch '79, the program's founder and financier, announced last Friday that he would continue to fund DEP for an additional year, reversing his prior announcement in January 2005 that the program would end in June 2006. "I hope that during this time, the Dartmouth Administration will come to see that DEP is a uniquely effective innovation in the teaching of writing -- one that the College should adopt as its own and spread throughout the institution as quickly as is feasible," Asch wrote in a letter to the three department chairs announcing his decision to continue funding the program. All three in-house writing editors for the respective departments have agreed to stay in their positions for another year.
EMI ITO / The Dartmouth Staff After suffering through its share of heartbreaks this season, the once-highly-touted men's lacrosse team earned an important morale boost on Wednesday afternoon: The Big Green defeated Yale for its first Ivy League win. Co-captain Brad Heritage '06 sees the win as a potential turn-around. "I think this win will do a lot for us in terms of helping attitude at practice and having a little bit more confidence in our game and the fact that we can come out and get a win against teams we know we can beat. "It's a good feeling to know that this year's seniors will graduate never having lost to Yale," Heritage said. The Big Green (5-6, 1-2 Ivy) pieced together the 12-10 victory with a strong, albeit uncharacteristic, fourth-quarter effort. After taking a 7-5 lead into the locker rooms at halftime, Dartmouth had trouble restarting in the second half.
Chris Takeuchi / The Dartmouth Staff Dartmouth track and field achieved success across the country last weekend, running in multiple meets and producing a number of outstanding performances.
The transition from the music world to film has seemed less than difficult for most rappers and hip-hop artists.
Jennie Post / The Dartmouth Staff Continuing its strong play of late, the Dartmouth softball team won three of its four games on the road this weekend.
Since 1992, the government has required that food packages carry a "nutrition facts" label. Now, a team of Dartmouth researchers wants prescriptions to have their own fact boxes, and they are set to receive a $394,333 grant to develop that idea. Lisa Schwartz and Steven Woloshin, researchers at Dartmouth Medical School and the Veterans Affairs Hospital in White River Junction, Vt., are getting the money in a government effort to combat pharmaceutical company spin. These boxes would show doctors the pros and cons of drugs they might prescribe without their having to search through the fine print of FDA-mandated drug information or look up clinical trials on the internet. "The idea is to give them simple tabular data so they can have some sense of the size of the effect of the drug," said Gilbert Welch, another researcher on the project. Welch said the ultimate goal would be to have the FDA include these boxes with the required insert, which patients get with their medicines or see on the back of magazine ads. The grant is one of 22 being distributed to medical institutions across the country. According to Julie Brill of the Vermont Attorney General's Office, the grant winners were selected from more than 30 proposals by an association of state attorneys general in association with outside consultants. She said they were looking for a variety of possible approaches that would help give doctors unbiased information they might otherwise not have time to get. "We thought they were worth funding to see how successful they are," Brill said. The money comes from a 2004 government settlement with Warner-Lambert for marketing the anti-seizure drug Neurontin for unapproved uses.
Former Hood Museum of Art director Timothy Rub is taking over at the Cleveland Museum of Art this week.
President George W. Bush selected Rob Portman '78 on Tuesday to serve as the director of his Office of Management and Budget, as part of an attempt to revitalize his staff during one of the most trying political moments of his presidency.
Asafu Suzuki / The Dartmouth Staff Dimensions Weekend kicks off today with almost five hundred prospective members of the Class of 2010 pouring onto campus to attend College classes, meet current students, eat in the dining halls and live in the dorm rooms.
To the Editor: I would like to commend D. Bradley Bate '04 for his thoughtful letter to the editor blaming the student body for the failure of the Big Green Bikes program ("Campus responsible for Big Green Bike failure," April 18). I am sure Bate would also agree that the failure of the Soviet Union can be traced to the "total lack of respect and responsibility" of the Russian people. Communal property is a viable and time-tested idea, and I feel that the program was a great leap forward for Dartmouth.
Beginnings are the best: the beginning of spring, the beginning of a new term and, for many prospective members of the Class of 2010 nationwide, the beginning of college.
In an uneven weekend for Dartmouth golf, the women's golf team was red-hot at the Dartmouth Triangular match while the men's team went cold at the New England Division I Championship, seven days after finishing second in the Yale Spring Tournament. The women came in second-place, just one stroke behind Harvard.
EMI ITO / The Dartmouth Staff Student body presidential and vice presidential candidates came together to discuss pertinent campus issues for the first time during the Student Assembly-hosted candidate forum on Tuesday night.
To the Editor: The Dartmouth does well to raise the important issue of financial aid in the latest Verbum Ultimum ("Leading on financial aid," April 14). The socio-economic diversity of the student body is a major priority of the College.
To the Editor: I read last week's article on the National Science Foundation decision to end funding for Dartmouth's new Center for Cognitive and Educational Neuroscience with mixed feelings ("College to lose most of $21.8m NSF grant," April 12). As an undergraduate researcher in the Psychological and Brain Sciences department for the past two years, and one of the students asked to present research at the recent NSF review of CCEN, I am glad the issue is being discussed.